yes
The maximum latitude is 90 degrees, you cannot have 180 degrees latitude.
There is 360 degrees in a circle.
90 degrees north latitude and 90 degrees south latitude are the maximum values; they represent the exact locations of the pole. Zero degrees is the equator. 180 degrees longitude is the exact limit of longitude; it represents the originally defined location of the International Date Line, exactly opposite the Prime Meridian. Oh. On second reading (and some editing of the question) I finally grasped the question. Latitude: the equator is one. Then there is one to eighty nine in the north, and again in the south. 90 degrees north and south are points, not lines. That makes 179 lines of latitude. Then you have the Prime Meridian (one); and 179 degrees east, and again west. That's 359. Then there is 180 degrees which makes 360 lines of longitude. 179 plus 360 equals 539 lines total.
All points on Earth at any single latitude blend together to form a line thatcompletely encircles the globe. If you intend to do any measurements with it,then it'll help to recall that any complete circle subtends 360 degrees of arc.
The globe is divided into 360 degrees of longitude and 180 degrees of latitude. Longitude lines run from the North Pole to the South Pole, while latitude lines run parallel to the equator. Together, these divisions help in navigating and identifying locations on Earth.
The Equator is the latitude line with a given value of 0-degrees. There Equator runs completely around the Earth. There are 360-longitude lines that intersect the Equator.
degrees!
The angles around circles add up to 360 degrees
circles don't have an exact angle and there are 360 degrees in a circle
Yes
Because there are 360 degrees around a circle and a complete rotation of an angle is also 360 degrees
Degrees.