90 I think
The tropic of cancer should be the same angle N of the Equator as the Antarctic circle is N of the S Pole.
There are no countries south of the Antarctic Circle. In fact, all land south of 60 degrees S is governed by the Antarctic Treaty. Between 60 degrees S and the Antarctic Circle, you will find the Southern Ocean.
The Antarctic Circle is about 66 degrees S.
The Antarctic Circle surrounds the globe at approx. 23.5 degrees north of the south pole.That would be 156.5 degrees south of the north pole.
"High" latitudes. The equator has a latitude of zero. The area between the Tropic of Cancer (at 23.5 degrees north) and the Tropic of Capricorn (at 23.5 degrees south) are the "tropics" or low latitudes. The "polar regions" are above the Arctic Circle or below the Antarctic Circle, where the latitudes are higher than 66.5 degrees (north or south) are "high". The areas between the tropics and the arctic/antarctic are called "mid-latitudes or "temperate zones".
Approximately 156.5 degrees of latitude.
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.
Between 23.5 degrees North and 60 degrees North (Tropic of Cancer to the Arctic Circle) and between 23.5 degrees South and 60 degrees South (Tropic of Capricorn to the Antarctic Circle)
roughly 133 degrees
The name for 66.5 degrees south latitude is the Antarctic Circle.
The Antarctic Circle is the parallel of 23.5 degrees south latitude,or 113.5 degrees south of the north pole.
The Antarctic Circle is the imaginary circle 66.5 degrees south of the equator and parallel to it.
The Tropic of Cancer to the Tropic of Capricorn as the Arctic Circle is to the Antarctic Circle.