It depends on location and time of year. Overall, North America is colder than South America on average.
Because of the equator.
No, the South Pole is not warmer than the North Pole. The South Pole is typically colder than the North Pole due to its higher elevation and location on a continent surrounded by a vast ice sheet.
Yes the further south you get the warmer it gets the further north you get the colder it gets!
north is colder because it's more near russia i have been to north china its really cold and the south is warmer
it's colder up north and warmer down south
An easy way to say that would be North America is north and South America is south. Another way to say that is South America has tropical rain forest and North America has the Rocky Mountains. There are a lot of differences between North and South America. And I think you meant South America not South American.
It gets Colder. SK(APEX)
Yes, Hokkaido is because its further north. But Kyushu is warmer because its further South :).
The Antarctic Peninsula is most likely warmer than the South Pole, since it's about 1,500 miles north of the pole and substantially lower in elevation.
It depends on the season .But north Europe is colder and west Europe can be cold but normal it's warmer than north and south Europe is warm.
Some physical geographic differences between the north and the south include temperature variation, with the north typically experiencing colder climates compared to the south. Vegetation varies as well, with the north often having more coniferous forests and the south having more deciduous forests. The topography can also differ, with the north having more mountainous regions compared to the flatter terrain of the south.
south