Lines of latitude are imaginary lines that circle the earth in the East/West plane, and range from 0 degrees (the equator) to 90 degrees (the poles).
Lines of latitude can be drawn every 30 degrees, or 10 degrees, as seen on many maps of the world, or they can be drawn at closer intervals, such as every 1 degree.
Lines can also be drawn at fractions of a degree!
e.g. New York lies between latitudes 40° 30′ N and 45° 1′ N
So, which particular lines do we want to know the distance between? Those at 10 degree intervals, at 30 degree intervals, at fractions of a degree interval, or at some other distance apart?
It we stick to lines of latitude which are 1 degree apart, we find that they are, on average, about 69 miles(111 kilometers) apart.
However, when we get nearer the equator they are actually only 68.703 miles (110.567 km) apart, but when we are nearer the poles they are more like 69.407 (111.699 km) apart!
For more information and an explanation of why the distance differs on different parts of the earth, see Related links below.
All longitudes converge (meet, come together) at the north and south poles.
So the farther from the equator you measure them, the closer together the
degrees are.
Along the equator, 1 degree of longitude spans about 111 kilometers (69 miles),
and that shrinks to zero at the poles.
Technically, 1 degree of longitude is
(69 miles) times (the cosine of the latitude where you're measuring it) .
There are approximately 111 kilometres (69 miles) between each line of latitude.
If you are close to the equator it is 60 miles and when your farther away it is 69.
There is about 69 miles between each degree of latitude.
-- Since every point on a line of latitude has the same latitude, the line has no thickness. -- Its length depends on its latitude. -- The line at zero latitude, known as the 'equator', is a great circle and so its length is the circumference of the Earth ... about 24,900 miles. -- Every other line of latitude is a small circle. Its length is 24,900 miles times the cosine of the latitude which it marks. -- The distance between any latitude and the one that's 1° north or south of it is about 111.1 kilometers (69 miles).
Which line of latitude is the border between Nebraska and Kansas
Lines of latitude . . .-- are imaginary-- are invisible-- are invented by humans.-- They are all parallel to each other.-- Each line is composed of every point on Earth that has the same latitude.-- Each line goes completely around the Earth.-- The lines are labeled according to the latitude that each represents. The linethat represents zero latitude is the equator.-- Since the Earth's surface is spherical, latitude is an angle. It ranges from zero atthe equator to 90 degrees at the north and south poles.-- The length of any line of latitude depends on which latitude it represents, being approximately(40,075 kilometers / 24,900 miles) times (cosine of the latitude) .-- There is no set number of 'lines'. Different maps and globes display differentnumbers of lines. But a line can be made from any latitude that can be named,and there are an infinite number of those.
The latitude line that circles the globe at the exact midpoint between the North and South pole is known as the equator. It is located at 0 degrees latitude and divides the Earth into the Northern Hemisphere and the Southern Hemisphere. The equator is approximately 40,075 kilometers (24,901 miles) long.
All parallels of latitude are parallel to the equator and to each other.
-- Since every point on a line of latitude has the same latitude, the line has no thickness. -- Its length depends on its latitude. -- The line at zero latitude, known as the 'equator', is a great circle and so its length is the circumference of the Earth ... about 24,900 miles. -- Every other line of latitude is a small circle. Its length is 24,900 miles times the cosine of the latitude which it marks. -- The distance between any latitude and the one that's 1° north or south of it is about 111.1 kilometers (69 miles).
Which line of latitude is the border between Nebraska and Kansas
yes
Lines of latitude . . .-- are imaginary-- are invisible-- are invented by humans.-- They are all parallel to each other.-- Each line is composed of every point on Earth that has the same latitude.-- Each line goes completely around the Earth.-- The lines are labeled according to the latitude that each represents. The linethat represents zero latitude is the equator.-- Since the Earth's surface is spherical, latitude is an angle. It ranges from zero atthe equator to 90 degrees at the north and south poles.-- The length of any line of latitude depends on which latitude it represents, being approximately(40,075 kilometers / 24,900 miles) times (cosine of the latitude) .-- There is no set number of 'lines'. Different maps and globes display differentnumbers of lines. But a line can be made from any latitude that can be named,and there are an infinite number of those.
depends on the globe you look at
The latitude line that circles the globe at the exact midpoint between the North and South pole is known as the equator. It is located at 0 degrees latitude and divides the Earth into the Northern Hemisphere and the Southern Hemisphere. The equator is approximately 40,075 kilometers (24,901 miles) long.
A line of latitude is the line of latitude shown on a map, usually representing 10 degrees latitude. Degrees of latitude are simply the number of degrees, such as 33.33 etc.
A line of latitude is the line of latitude shown on a map, usually representing 10 degrees latitude. Degrees of latitude are simply the number of degrees, such as 33.33 etc.
A line of latitude is the line of latitude shown on a map, usually representing 10 degrees latitude. Degrees of latitude are simply the number of degrees, such as 33.33 etc.
All parallels of latitude are parallel to the equator and to each other.
That would be the equator, at zero latitude.
Lines of latitude encircle the earth, with the Great Circle being the Equator. Each line of latitude is parallel to each other, so will never intersect.