90.
The whole sphere (pole to pole to pole) is 360.
There are 90 degrees of latitude between the equator (0°) and the South Pole (90°S).
The same applies to the North Pole (90°N latitude).
The Equator is at 0 degrees latitude. The South Pole is at 90 degrees S latitude. The North Pole is at 90 degrees N latitude.
There are 180 degrees between the North and South Poles.
(That trip is halfway around the sphere.)
That trip is half-way around a sphere (the Earth).
Halfway around anything is 180°. Latitude is no exception.
That's an arc of 180 degrees . . . just what you'd expect
for a trip exactly half-way around a sphere.
90°, the equator is 0° and the north pole is 90°.
There are 180 degrees between the North and South Poles
There are 90° between the Equator and the North Pole.
i have no idea
90 degrees North, 90 degrees South.
The location of the poles. 0 degrees North is the South Pole. 0 degrees South is the North Pole.
The north pole is 90 degrees north latitude. The south pole is 90 degrees south latitude. When you travel from one pole to the other, you go through 180 degrees of latitude. Which isn't so surprising, since that trip takes you halfway around the world.
The South Pole is at 90 degrees S. The North Pole is at 90 degrees N. All lines of longitude converge at both poles.
Ninety degrees South Latitude for the south pole and ninety degrees North Latitude for the north pole. No longitude indicator is required to position poles on the planet earth.
180 degrees
There are 180 degrees of latitude between the poles.
The North Pole is 90 degrees north. The South Pole is 90 degrees south. (Note that this refers to the geographic poles, not the magnetic poles.)
The Equator.
caca is the answer
The geographical poles are the North and South Poles. The South Pole is at 90 degrees S latitude. The North Pole is at 90 degrees N latitude. All lines of longitude converge at both poles.
90 degrees North, 90 degrees South.
90 degrees...at the north and south poles.
The north and south poles (90 degrees north or south of the equator).
The location of the poles. 0 degrees North is the South Pole. 0 degrees South is the North Pole.
The north pole is 90 degrees north latitude. The south pole is 90 degrees south latitude. When you travel from one pole to the other, you go through 180 degrees of latitude. Which isn't so surprising, since that trip takes you halfway around the world.
The Arctic and Antarctic Cirles are 66.5619° from the North and South Poles.