The equator is at 0o latitude. The South Pole is at 90o south and the North Pole is at 90o north, for a total latitude difference of 180o.
Since a whole sphere (which is a 3D circle) is 360° any way you slice through the center , From one point to an opposite point (antipodal points) must be half of 360o, or 180o.
Every line of longitude north of the Equator is a baseline that runs on the Earth's surface to the North Pole. Prime here is the Prime Meridian -- 0 degrees.
trade windsWinds
True north runs from any point on the earths surface to the North Pole.
The North Pole at 90° North. You cannot go any further north.
The earths temperature varies for example living on the equator it would be hotter but up in the north lets say iceland it would be a lot colder so there is no real earths temperature(unless you get to the core of the earth)
You would be in the tropics, most likely between 30 degrees north and 30 degrees south.
Every line of longitude north of the Equator is a baseline that runs on the Earth's surface to the North Pole. Prime here is the Prime Meridian -- 0 degrees.
July 27th
trade windsWinds
True North
The Sun's rays can hit Earth's surface at a right angle to the surface, depending on the season, anywhere between the tropics (i.e., between 23.5 degrees north and 23.5 degrees south), at noon, when the Sun is highest in the sky.
The geographical North and South Pole - not the magnetic poles.
True north runs from any point on the earths surface to the North Pole.
The North Pole at 90° North. You cannot go any further north.
Which baseline runs from any point on earth's surface to the north pole
the north pole
The earth is tilted 23.5 degrees. This is what creates the earths seasons. The two hemispheres (north and south) are always on opposite seasons.