Inhabited settlements within the Arctic Circle include those on the coast of the
northern two thirds of Greenland, portions of Norway Sweden, and Finland, the
major city of Murmansk and a few Siberian towns in Russia, Kotzebue, Fort Yukon,
and Barrow in Alaska, and several towns in northern Canada.
Except for scientific research stations, there are no permanent population centers
within the Antarctic Circle.
The Arctic and Antarctic circles are named after the regions they mark. The Arctic Circle is named after the constellation Ursa Major, known as the Great Bear or "arctic bear," while the Antarctic Circle is named after the opposite direction of the Arctic Circle on the globe.
Arctic comes from the Greek word arktos, meaning bear, Ursa Major, North Star. Antarctic just tacked on a prefix meaning "opposite." Arctic comes from the Greek word arktos, meaning bear, Ursa Major, North Star. Antarctic just tacked on a prefix meaning "opposite."
The Antarctic is a landmass: the Arctic is sea ice.
Some major cities found in the temperate zone include New York City, London, Paris, Tokyo, and Sydney. These cities experience four distinct seasons with moderate temperatures and are located roughly between the Tropics and the Arctic Circle or Antarctic Circle.
There are no cities, states, or countries on the Antarctic continent.
The arctic, antarctic, pacific, Indian, Atlantic.
No point in the USA is less than about 5,900 miles from the Antarctic Circle.
Murmansk
straya
Russia is the country with the ten coldest major cities, including cities like Norilsk, Yakutsk, and Vorkuta. These cities experience extremely cold temperatures due to their high latitude and proximity to the Arctic Circle.
The five major tropic regions are the Tropic of Cancer, Tropic of Capricorn, Equator, Arctic Circle, and Antarctic Circle. These regions experience high temperatures and unique biodiversity due to their proximity to the equator.
The Antarctic Circle.