The Prime Meridian touches both the north and south poles, but to be very
technical about it, it doesn't 'pass through' either of them.
The poles are the ends of the Prime Meridian. So when it reaches each pole,
it stops there, and doesn't 'pass through'.
No. The Prime Meridian at 0 degrees -- and the International Date line at 180 degrees, both terminate at the poles.
The Prime Meridian ends at both the North Pole and South Pole.
The Prime Meridian is a line of longitude (0°). It goes through every north or south measurementbetween the north pole and the south pole, and no other lines of longitude cross it.
"104 degrees East of the prime meridian" defines a line between the north and south poles, passing through central Siberia, central Mongolia, China, Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia, Singapore, Indonesia, and Antarctica. "1 degree north of the prime meridian" has no meaning, since the prime meridian itself passes through every possible north and south latitude.
The simplest, totally correct answer to that question is: 'No'.The Prime Meridian touches both the north and south poles, but to be verytechnical about it, it doesn't 'pass through' either of them.The poles are the ends of the Prime Meridian (and of every other meridian too).So when it reaches each pole, it stops there, and doesn't 'pass through'.
The Prime Meridian is an imaginary line between the Earth's north and south poles, which, by international agreement, marks zero longitude. The poles are its extremities. Neither pole is its beginning or its end. Its important feature is its location, and the line itself has no direction.
The prime meridian runs north and south through England, so most of Europe is EAST of the prime meridian.
The Prime Meridian runs through Greenwich, England.
The Prime Meridian ends at both the North Pole and South Pole.
Yes. Every meridian of longitude does that.
Yes.The prime meridian connects the North Pole and the South Pole - passing through Greenwich, outside London, England.
The Prime Meridian touches both the north and south poles, but to be verytechnical about it, it doesn't 'pass through' either of them.The poles are the ends of the Prime Meridian. So when it reaches each pole,it stops there, and doesn't 'pass through'.
The Prime Meridian runs through both the North and South Poles, dividing Earth into the eastern and western hemispheres. =========================================The Prime Meridian touches both the north and south poles, but to be verytechnical about it, it doesn't 'run through' either of them.The poles are the ends of the Prime Meridian. So when it reaches each pole,it stops there, and doesn't 'run through'.
The Prime Meridian is a line of longitude (0°). It goes through every north or south measurementbetween the north pole and the south pole, and no other lines of longitude cross it.
North -- South
The Prime Meridian touches both the north and south poles, but to be very technical about it, it doesn't 'pass through' either of them.The poles are the ends of the Prime Meridian. So when it reaches each pole,it stops there, and doesn't 'pass through'.
The Prime Meridian.
"Yes and no."The Prime Meridian touches both the north and south poles, but to be verytechnical about it, it doesn't 'pass through' either of them.The poles are the ends of the Prime Meridian. So when it reaches each pole,it stops there, and doesn't 'pass through'.