The "tropical latitudes" are the latitudes within 23.5 degrees of the equator, both north
and south of it.
The half of the "tropics" between the equator and the Arctic Circle is the half between the
equator and 23.5 degrees north latitude.
The line at 23.5 degrees north latitude that marks the northern boundary of the tropics
is the "Tropic of Cancer".
The Tropic of Capricorn.
Tropic of CancerThe Tropic of Cancer.
No, that latitude is just north of the Arctic Circle, which is at about 66.56° north latitude.
4601.8 miles from the Equator to the Arctic Circle 69.2 miles between latitude lines. From the Equator (0°) to the Arctic Circle (66 .5°) 66.5 X 69.2 = 4601.8 miles
The Tropic of Cancer is to the Tropic of Capricorn as the Arctic Circle is to the Antarctic Circle. They are lines of latitude either north (Arctic Circle, Tropic of Cancer) or south of the equator.
Biodiversity generally increases as latitude moves from the arctic region towards the equator due to factors like climate stability, increased solar energy, and longer growing seasons. The equator and tropical regions have the highest biodiversity, while the arctic has the lowest due to harsh environmental conditions and limited species adaptations.
what is the distance north and south of the equator: Latitude.
Lines of latitude.
lines of latitude
It is the parallel of latitude that runs 66° 33′ 44″ (or 66.5622°) north of the Equator.
equator latitude 0 is hot arctic and antarctic high latiitude it is cold
Any latitude north of roughly "66.5° North" is north of the Arctic Circle.