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All the lines of longitude meet or converge at the North Pole - they meet at the South Pole too!
Longtitude
All meridians of longitude converge (meet) at the north pole and south pole.
If you mean the longitude lines, as seen on a globe, they meet at the North Pole and at the South Pole.
at the South Pole
yes they do my friend (and at the north pole too)
The South Pole is the end point for all lines of longitude -- as is the North Pole -- so all lines meet at both poles. The South Pole is located on the Antarctic continent.
All lines of latitude meet at the South Pole -- and the North Pole, and what they meet is their 180-degree opposite. For example, the Prime Meridian -- 0 degrees meets the International Date Line -- 180 degrees at both poles.
No. All lines of latitude meet at the South Pole -- and the North Pole. For example, the Prime Meridian -- 0 degrees meets the International Date Lilne -- 180 degrees, at the poles.
All longitudes converge at the north and south poles.No matter what longitude you're at,-- if you stay on it and go north, you wind up at the north pole,-- if you stay on it and go south, you wind up at the south pole,because all longitudes come together at the poles.
Yes. Any two lines of constant latitude that you choose stay the same distance apart everywhere and never meet or cross. That's a big part of the reason that they're often called "parallels" of latitude.
All the lines of longitude on earth meet on the Antarctic continent, at the South Pole.