Yes ;)
No geographic mapping lines go "through" the poles. The meridians of longitude are semi-circles that join the poles, so the ends of the meridians are at the poles.
No geographic mapping lines go "through" the poles. The meridians of longitude are semi-circles that join the poles, so the ends of the meridians are at the poles.
Meridians are lines of longitude that pass from the North to the South poles.
Meridians are lines of longitude that are drawn from the North to South poles.
meridians
Yes.
Every meridian touches both the south AND the north poles. But those are the ends of the meridians, so none pass THROUGH 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.
All meridians of longitude converge (meet) at the north and south poles.
longitude are lines that go from north poles to south poles just like longitude lines meridians are vertical and are form north to south u get it rite?
All meridians of longitude converge at the north and south poles.
Meridians meet at the poles and are widest apart at the equator. Zero degrees longitude (0°) is called the prime meridian. The degrees of longitude run 180° east and 180° west from the prime meridian. Latitude and longitude lines form an imaginary grid over the Earth's surface.