yes
That's like asking "How many inches difference is between the marks on the ruler ?". The answer is: It depends on the ruler. They're not all the same, and there's no official standard set of marks. Some globes have lines every 15 degrees, some have lines every 20 degrees, or every 30 degrees, or every 10 degrees, and some have no lines printed on them at all.
no.
A spherical map of the world or any location is called a globe. all globes are even set at an axis to resemble the earths actual placement in space.
Some maps and globes print a line every 10 degrees, some every 15 degrees, some every 20 degrees or 30 degrees, and some maps and globes have no lines at all. I use mapping software that can give me a line every 0.0005 degree if I want to see them. There is no standard set of lines that everybody must use.
All the astronauts used by N.A.s.A have walked on the surface of the earth.
The South Pole
paleontology
I forget what the setting was but if you set them with a paper match stick it will be real close.
they all use the same set of nucleotides.
Not necessarily, it gives options but can also give a different slant on a set of facts.
The latitudes of places on Earth cover a range of 180 degrees ... from -90 at thesouth pole to +90 at the north pole.Within that range, there are an infinite number of different possible latitudes,just as there are an infinite number of possible lengths on a ruler, regardless ofhow many of them are marked on different rulers, maps, or globes. There is nostandard set of marks.
Living organisms on Earth are similar in that they are all composed of cells, they require energy for survival, they can reproduce, and they can respond and adapt to their environment.