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A time belt, or zone, is 15 degrees of longitude wide.
At westernmost, 124"22'At easternmost 114"10so approx 10 degrees absolute width, though the above longitudes are at different lattitudes. Maximum width at same latitude is approx 6.5 degrees
-- The northern and southern hemispheres each have 90 degrees of latitude and 360 degrees of longitude. -- The eastern and western hemispheres each have 180 degrees of latitude and 180 degrees of longitude.
As wide as my ass:)
Roughly 47 degrees of latitude including the equator.
The Earth's axis is tilted 23½ degrees, so the Sun is overhead on two dates each year within a strip that is 47 degrees of latitude (5200 km) wide, between the Tropics of Cancer in the north and Capricorn in the south.
One degree of latitude is approximately 69 miles (111 kilometers) apart. This distance varies slightly due to the Earth's shape, but it's a commonly used average value for navigation and geographic measurements.
CA (California) is 250 miles wide. CA (Canada) is 3426 miles wide.
The system of latitude/longitude only applies to locations on Earth's surface. Objects in the sky can be seen over a wide range of latitudes, and they rotate over every longitude in the course of a day. Taurus is defined as a region of the celestial map that covers the range of declination between roughly -2 degrees and +31 degrees. So at least a part of it is visible from any latitude on Earth, and ALL of it is visible from anywhere north of about 60 degrees South latitude ... every continent except Antarctica.
I can see 7.8213° of longitude.
That latitude crosses the little skinny piece of West Virginia that sticks up there between Ohio and Pennsylvania and is only about 12 miles wide. It crosses land in Glendale, Wheeling, Dallas, Moundsville, and Cameron, WVa.
There are a wide variety of college institutions which offer students business degrees in the state of California. Examples of such colleges include Stanford, UCLA, and Cal Berkeley.