All meridians of longitude converge at the north and south poles.
All meridians of longitude converge at the north and south poles.
Yes. All longitudes converge (meet) at the north and south poles.
Parallel lines, by definition, cannot meet. The lines of longitude meet at the Poles.
Lines of longitude meet at the poles, both North and South. At the North Pole, all lines of longitude converge and meet at a single point. The same holds true for the South Pole, where lines of longitude also converge and meet at a single point.
All lines of longitude meet at the North and South Poles.
longitude
-- All lines of longitude meet at the north and south poles. -- No two lines of latitude ever meet or cross each other. -- Every line of longitude crosses every line of latitude. -- Every line of latitude crosses every line of longitude. -- There are an infinite number of each kind, so there are an infinite number of places where a line of longitude crosses a line of latitude. (That's kind of the whole idea of the system.)
The poles
The meridians meet at the poles, which are the points on Earth's surface where the lines of longitude converge. At the North Pole, all lines of longitude meet, and the same is true for the South Pole.
Lines of Longitude meet/intersect at the North & South Poles ONLY.
All the lines of longitude meet or converge at the North Pole - they meet at the South Pole too!
The poles.