The 20 degrees south line of latitude passes through Australia, Africa, and South America.
70° west is a longitude.North America, South America, and Antarctica include territory at that longitude.
No, the equator does not pass through Australia. It is 647 nautical miles from the northern tip of Australia to the Equator.Australia lies completely south of the equator. The significant line of latitude which passes through Australia is the Tropic of Capricorn.
South Africa, Australia, and South America
-- The parallel of 20° North latitude doesn't touch South America at all. -- The parallel of 20° South latitude crosses territory in Chile, Bolivia, Paraguay, and Brazil.
North America, South America, Asia, Australia, and Antarctica are all touch by the Pacific.
North America South America Antarctica
Asia, North America, South America and Australia touch the Pacific Ocean.
antlantic ocean
A line of latitudes run east-west as circles parallel to the equator so only the northern-most and southern-most latitude would touch the pole. The north pole is located at 90 degrees north latitude, and the south pole at 90 degrees south latitude so only a single line of latitude (actually a point) is at each pole.Longitude lines run north-south so each line runs from pole to pole. All lines of longitude (also called meridians) come together at the poles so each pole has every longitude.
No. Argentina and Chile are in southern South America. The points in Argentina closest to the equator are about 20° south latitude. This is about 1400 miles (2250 km) south of the equator.
The four continents that touch the Indian ocean are Asia, Africa, Antarctica, Australia. Asia to the north, Africa to the west, Antarctica to the south, and Australia to the east.