You can find the Antarctic Circle in the Southern Hemisphere.
Both "tropics" are north of the Antarctic Circle. This one is in the southern hemisphere. The tropic of cancer is in the northern hemisphere.
It's in ALL of them except the northern one.
It's in all of them, except the northern one.
The Tropic of Capricorn is located in the Southern Hemisphere, while the Antarctic Circle is also in the Southern Hemisphere. These geographical lines mark important reference points on Earth related to the positions of the sun and the Earth's axial tilt.
The hemisphere experiencing summer when the Antarctic Circle has 24 hours of darkness is the Northern Hemisphere. This is because when one pole is tilted away from the sun, the other pole is tilted towards it, resulting in longer days and warmer temperatures in the opposite hemisphere.
The Antarctic Circle -- 66°S 33′ 44″ - the latitude in the Southern Hemisphere south of which marks locations on earth that experience at least one 24-hour day and one 24-hour night each year. The Antarctic Circle crosses Antarctica and the Southern Ocean.
The Antarctic Circle is the northernmost latitude in the Southern Hemisphere at which the sun can remain continuously above or below the horizon for 24 hours, which it does for one 24-hour period twice each year.
The Antarctic Circle -- 66°S 33′ 44″ - the latitude in the Southern Hemisphere south of which marks locations on earth that experience at least one 24-hour day and one 24-hour night each year. The Antarctic Circle crosses Antarctica and the Southern Ocean.
The Arctic Circle is located in the Northern Hemisphere and surrounds the North Pole, while the Antarctic Circle is in the Southern Hemisphere and surrounds the South Pole. The Arctic Circle is characterized by polar bears and a mix of land and sea ice, while the Antarctic Circle is known for penguins and a landmass covered by a thick ice sheet.
Antarctica is in three of the four defined hemispheres.The only hemisphere that Antarctica is not in is the northern one.
The Antarctic Circle is one of the five major circles (or parallels) of latitude that mark maps of the Earth. For 2012, it is the parallel of latitude that runs 66° 33′ 44″ (or 66.5622°) south of the Equator.The Antarctic Circle is the northernmost latitude in the Southern Hemisphere at which the sun can remain continuously above or below the horizon for 24 hours.
Never.The Antarctic Circle marks the latitude on planet earth south of which at least one 24-hour period has no sunrise or no sunset.All latitudes north of the Antarctic Circle experience one sunrise and one sunset each day...until the latitude of the Arctic Circle, where the reverse occurs.