well the answer i put was the equator
Africa was the center of Earths only continent
The only continent through which all longitude lines pass is Antarctica. This is because the lines of longitude converge at the South Pole, which is located on the continent of Antarctica. As a result, all the meridians of longitude meet at this point, making it the only continent through which they all pass.
No, South Africa is located in the center of the southern part of the continent of Africa
During the formation of Pangaea, the supercontinent, the continent that was roughly in the center was Africa. The modern-day landmasses of South America, North America, Europe, and Asia surrounded Africa as Pangaea formed.
One famous center of learning in Africa--and also a center of Christianity--was Carthage in North Africa. At the time of St. Augustine, it was the center of both leisure and learning in the northern part of the continent.
It's between the center and the southeast of the continent, between 33° and 36.5° north latitude and between 89.6° and 94.7° west longitude.
The center of the Earth has no latitude or longitude. Those scales only apply to the surface. -- The Prime Meridian (zero longitude) runs through Algeria, Mali, Burkina Faso, and Togo, in Africa, then goes on to pass about 15 miles east of the center of Accra, Ghana. -- The equator (zero latitude) passes about 385 miles south of Accra, in the sea. So that's the point of zero latitude, zero longitude.
That point is in northeast China, only about 26 miles from the border with Outer Mongolia, and about 360 miles north-northeast of the center of Beijing. China, of course, is on the Asian continent.
Pangaea (pronounced pan-jee-uh)
the continet that is close to the centre of the world is asia
The capital city of Bogota is located just north of the center of the country.
That point is in South Africa, roughly 50 miles northwest of the center of Pretoria.