Yes
The continents which are located north and south of the equator are Asia, Africa and South America.
The Equator divides the Earth into North or South. The Meridian is the other one, more specifically the one running through Greenwich, UK which divides the earth into east and west. It serves as a helpful memory aide when learning the location of the world's land masses and water bodies.
There are seven continents on Earth: Africa Antarctica Asia Australia Europe North America South America These continents all used to be connected and formed the supercontinent of Pangea, some 300 million years ago. At this time, this was the only continent on Earth.
Hurricanes do not typically cross the equator. Due to the Coriolis effect, hurricanes tend to spin counterclockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere, making it difficult for them to maintain their structure when crossing the equator.
Pacific
No, hurricanes cannot cross the equator because of the Coriolis effect, which causes storms to rotate in opposite directions in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres.
No, hurricanes do not cross the equator because of the Coriolis effect, which causes storms to rotate in opposite directions in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres.
No, hurricanes cannot cross the equator due to the Coriolis effect, which causes storms to rotate in opposite directions in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres.
The Equator crosses the northern part of South America, which is located mainly in the southern and western hemispheres.
The continents which are located north and south of the equator are Asia, Africa and South America.
Africa is the only continent to span the equator and have territory in all four hemispheres because its elongated shape allows it to cross the equator and extend from north to south, covering both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. The Prime Meridian also runs through Africa, placing some of its land in the Eastern and Western Hemispheres.
you would cross mexico to get to south america.
You can cross the US by river only if you are going north to south (south to north is harder) but not if you are going east to west, or west to east.
It crosses both
Its northern who ever said southern is stupid
No, you would not have to cross the equator when traveling from North America to Europe. The equator is an imaginary line dividing the Earth horizontally into Northern and Southern Hemispheres. North America and Europe are both located in the Northern Hemisphere.
it depends where you live From the south, cross France and continue north /keeping to the west. From the east, cross northern Germany and continue (not too far north because you might get to the Netherlands. From the north, cross The Netherlands and continue south. From the west, cross central England and continue across the English Channel/North Sea to Belgium.