Both of these areas are beyond 66 degrees of latitude in their respective hemispheres, and are called polar regions.
These are obviously called the "polar zones," the Arctic and the Antarctic.
Everyplace on earth that is not within the arctic or antarctic circles.
Nothing (on Earth) is east of the equator. It's east of the prime meridian ... and it's called 66.5 degrees east longitude.
No. The North Pole is in the Arctic, the South Pole in the Antarctic- opposite end of the Earth.
The major imaginary latitudinal lines on the earth's suface from north to south are - * the Arctic Circle * the Tropic of Cancer * the Equator * the Tropic of Capricorn * the Antarctic Circle
The Arctic and the Antarctic respectively.
These are obviously called the "polar zones," the Arctic and the Antarctic.
The earth's polar areas are at ARCTIC to the north and ANTARCTIC to the south of the equator.
The arctic and antarctic.
These are obviously called the "polar zones," the Arctic and the Antarctic.
The antarctic is colder than the arctic because of Antarctica, the continent, on which is stored 90% of the Earth's store of ice.
pacific Indian Atlantic antarctic arctic
Every meridian of longitude on Earth crosses the Antarctic Circle, the Arctic Circle, and every other parallel of latitude on Earth.
The sphere is called planet Earth. Further, you can find Antarctica in the Eastern, Western and Southern hemispheres. You can find the Arctic in the Eastern, Western and Northern hemispheres.
there are 5 oceans on the earth #beutiful girls all over the world
i think the lines closest to the outside of the earth
Polar regions are the areas of the globe surrounding the globe also known as frigid zones. The Northe pole and the South pole being the centres, these regions being dominated by the polar ice caps, resting respectively on the Arctic Ocean and the continent of Antarctica. Polar sea ice is currently diminishing, possibly as a global warming.