67th parallel south
The 67th parallel south is a circle of latitude that is 67 degrees south of the Earth's equatorial plane, about 50 km south of the Antarctic Circle. It crosses the Southern Ocean and Antarctica. Every day of the month of September (post-equinox) can view both astronomical dawn and astronomical dusk.
.svg.png.webp)
67°
67th parallel south
Around the world
Starting at the Prime Meridian and heading eastwards, the parallel 67° south passes through:
Co-ordinates Continent or ocean Notes 67°0′S 0°0′E Southern Ocean King Haakon VII Sea, south of the Atlantic Ocean 67°0′S 48°22′E Antarctica Enderby Land, territory claimed by Australia
67°0′S 49°34′E Southern Ocean Amundsen Bay, King Haakon VII Sea, south of the South Atlantic 67°0′S 50°33′E Antarctica Enderby Land, claimed by Australia
67°0′S 57°23′E Southern Ocean South of the Indian Ocean 68°0′S 82°33′E Antarctica Kemp Land, Mac. Robertson Land, claimed by Australia
68°0′S 136°0′E Adélie Land, claimed by France
68°0′S 142°0′E George V Land, claimed by Australia
67°0′S 146°47′E Southern Ocean Passing just south of Buckle Island, claimed by New Zealand
67°0′S 68°36′W Antarctica Adelaide Island and the Antarctic Peninsula, claimed by Argentina,
Chile and
United Kingdom
67°0′S 60°17′W Southern Ocean Weddell Sea, south of the Atlantic Ocean
See also
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.