All lines of latitude are parallel with the equator.
The 60th parallel South is a line of latitude crossing all lines of longitude.
A line of constant longitude is often called a "meridian". A line of constant latitude is often called a "parallel".
All 'lines' of latitude are parallel to all others.No meridian of longitude is parallel to any others.-- All 'lines' of latitude are parallel to all others.-- No meridian of longitude is parallel to any other one.
You mean latitude and longitude?
The Tropic of Cancer is a parallel of latitude, roughly 23.5 degrees north of the equator.
The 60th parallel South is a line of latitude crossing all lines of longitude.
A line of constant longitude is often called a "meridian". A line of constant latitude is often called a "parallel".
All 'lines' of latitude are parallel to all others.No meridian of longitude is parallel to any others.-- All 'lines' of latitude are parallel to all others.-- No meridian of longitude is parallel to any other one.
That would be latitude or longitude.
" 30° N " is a statement of latitude. All the points on Earth that have that latitude form a parallel of constant latitude, or a 'line' if you will.
Every line of constant latitude is parallel to all others. That's why they're often called "parallels" of latitude.
You mean latitude and longitude?
The Tropic of Cancer is a parallel of latitude, roughly 23.5 degrees north of the equator.
Parallel. Latitude and longitude are perpendicular.
Every meridian of longitude is perpendicular to every parallel of latitude, and every parallel of latitude is perpendicular to every meridian of longitude.
The differences are that the Equator in zero line of latitude. While the Prime Meridian is zero line of longitude. Latitude is horizontal and parallel to the Equator, and longitude runs from pole to pole.
Lines of constant latitude are all parallel to each other.