The calendar is the same though the seasons differ.
You're reading a calendar using your northern-hemisphere centric orientation. Antarctica is in the southern hemisphere, with reversed seasons from those experienced in the northern hemisphere.
No, it is not true. Due to the tilting of the world, when it is summer in the northern hemisphere, it is winter in the southern hemisphere, and visa versa.
there the same thing
Tornadoes form in the southern hemisphere for the same reason they form in the northern hemisphere. The mechanics are the same. See the related question for what causes tornadoes
No, it does not. When it is winter in one hemisphere, it is summer in the other. When it is fall in one, it is spring in the other.Yes, thats why we associate snow with Christmas (except for locations near the equator).
You're reading a calendar using your northern-hemisphere centric orientation. Antarctica is in the southern hemisphere, with reversed seasons from those experienced in the northern hemisphere.
Seasons in the northern hemisphere occur at opposite times to those in the southern hemisphere. For example, when it is winter in the southern hemisphere, it is summer in the northern hemisphere.
No, it is not necessarily summer in both hemispheres at the same time. Seasons are opposite in the northern and southern hemispheres, so if it is summer in the northern hemisphere, it is winter in the southern hemisphere.
No, it is not true. Due to the tilting of the world, when it is summer in the northern hemisphere, it is winter in the southern hemisphere, and visa versa.
The same months that are summer in the Northern Hemisphere.
there the same thing
winter
The same months that are summer in the Northern Hemisphere.
winter
They are both half of earth
*Facepalm* The same as the northern.
Tornadoes form in the southern hemisphere for the same reason they form in the northern hemisphere. The mechanics are the same. See the related question for what causes tornadoes