No. The Prime Meridian has several dips and bends.
The prime meridian is a line of longitude
The line name at 0 degrees longitude is commonly referred to as the Prime Meridian. This line passes through Greenwich, London, United Kingdom and can also be referred to as the International Meridian or Greenwich Meridian.
The International Date Line is located approximately along the 180° line of longitude, so it does not have a specific latitude. It is an imaginary line that runs from the North Pole to the South Pole.
The IDL should nominally follow the meridian of longitude that is 180 degrees from the Greenwich Prime Meridian ... roughly down the middle of the Pacific Ocean. But in defining the line, it was zigged and zagged where necessary to avoid cutting across nations and politically contiguous island groups.
Longitude on the Prime Meridian is zero. Half-way in a westerly direction between zero and 180 degrees is 90 degrees west longitude. Some places at that longitude include locations in Ontario Canada, Lake Superior, Wisconsin, Illinois, Arkansas, Louisiana, the Gulf of Mexico, Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, the Pacific Ocean, and Antarctica.
The prime meridian is a line of longitude
The Prime Meridian is a line of longitude that passes through Greenwich, England, and is used as the starting point for measuring longitude around the world.
Latitude comes first when specifying coordinates, followed by longitude. Latitude refers to how far north or south a point is from the Equator, while longitude indicates how far east or west a point is from the Prime Meridian.
follow your fingers on a map....:)
The line name at 0 degrees longitude is commonly referred to as the Prime Meridian. This line passes through Greenwich, London, United Kingdom and can also be referred to as the International Meridian or Greenwich Meridian.
Latitude and longitude coordinates are used to pinpoint locations on the Earth's surface. Latitude measures how far north or south a point is from the equator, while longitude measures how far east or west a point is from the Prime Meridian. By combining these two coordinates, we can identify any point on the Earth with precision.
If you knew your latitude was 57 and your longitude was 47, then you could look on a map of the earth and see which line is latitude 57. You could then follow latitude line 57 until you see hit longitude line 47. This would give you the precise location of your whereabouts.
The International Date Line is located approximately along the 180° line of longitude, so it does not have a specific latitude. It is an imaginary line that runs from the North Pole to the South Pole.
The International Date Line is close to the meridian of 180 degrees longitudefor much of its length, but doesn't follow it exactly, in order to avoid splittingany single island, state, or country into two different calendar dates.Helpful Spelling Glossary:-- Parallel . . . a line of constant latitude-- Meridian . . a line of constant longitude
This question can't be answered. To answer a latitude degree is needed. Simple way to get an answer is to get the map out. Find your latitude lines and the longitude lines and follow them until your finger on each line meets. There is your city.
First you go to where the prime meridian (0 degrees line of longitude) and the equator (0 degrees line of latitiude) cross, which is just south of Ghana in Africa. From there you go east or west according to the first coordinate and follow that around the earth to the correct line of longitude. Then you go north or south from that point to whatever the latitude indicates. The lines are usually shown on the globe at 15 degree intervals so you will need to interpolate (approximate) the position between the lines.
150'W 65'N Thanks add/follow me on fb Princes S. Roque