We can be quite certain that it does, because we know that
every point on Earth has both a latitude and a longitude.
From the most northerly latitude (Scottish border) to the most southerly latitude (Channel) England is around 620km in length.
Birmingham UK is on latitude 52°29'N, and longitude 01°52'W. and u r a wstemn
England occupies the range of latitude roughly between 50° and 55.8° north. Every latitude within that range crosses England, whether or not the publisher of any particular map or globe chose to print a line there.
Latitude: 49°51′N to 55°48′NLongitude: 6°27′W to 1°45.77′E
The approximate center of London England is Latitude 51.500152 Longitude -0.126236', or N 51° 30' 0.5472'' W 0° 7' 34.4496''
The Prime Meridian, but it depends on which part of England you're looking for.
No
England is located at approximately 51.5 degrees north latitude. The distance from the equator to any point on Earth is measured in degrees of latitude, so England is 51.5 degrees north of the equator.
Latitude = 53.48º N (53º28'47" N), Longitude = 2.24º W (2º14'24" W).
3° west longitude x 53.4° north latitude according to Wikipedia
England is approximately 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) north of the equator. The equator is located at 0 degrees latitude, while England's latitude ranges from about 50 to 60 degrees north. This distance can vary slightly depending on the specific location within England.
None. The southernmost point in England is at roughly 50° north latitude ... a good 1,100 miles north of 33° north.And don't even ask about 33° south latitude ... that's another 4,500 miles further.