New Zealand ranges in longitude between roughly 166.47° East to 178.55° East.
Longitude is measured from the Prime Meridian, so those are the angles
if you start at the Prime Meridian and travel eastward.
Traveling westward from the Prime Meridian, the corresponding angles
are 181.45° and 193.53° .
It would be 9pm.
There is no deviation of the Prime Meridian. There are a few deviations of the International Dateline, but none of them is anywhere near 3,000 miles away from the meridian of 180 degrees longitude.
Japan is a big place, and the Prime Meridian is a very long line. -- Sapporo, on the island of Hokkaido, is 141.3 degrees east of the Prime Meridian. If you travel straight west, the meridian is 6,020 miles (9,693 km) away. But if you travel to the closest point on the Prime Meridian, it's only 3,240 miles (5,214 km). -- Nagasaki, on the island of Honshu, is 129.8 degrees east of the Prime Meridian. If you travel straight west, the meridian is 6,860 miles (11,040 km) away. But if you travel to the closest point on the Prime Meridian, it's only 3,960 miles (6,373 km). The point on the Prime Meridian that's closest to both cities is . . . the North Pole.
Hatteras Island is at about 75.5 degrees west longitude. If you want to visit the Prime Meridian from North Carolina, the closest point is in the open sea about midway between Norway and Greenland, where the Prime Meridian is only 3,592 miles from Cape Hatteras.
The terminal building at Vancouver Intl is located at about 49.195° north latitude 123.178° west longitude. So if you travel straight east to the Prime Meridian, you have to cover 123.178° of longitude to get there. But . . . The Prime Meridian is a long line. It stretches half-way around the earth in the north-south direction. The point on the Prime Meridian that's closest to Vancouver Intl happens to be . . . the north Pole! To get there, you only have to cover 40.805° of latitude.
Mexico City is 99.133333 degrees west of the Prime Meridian
The greatest number of degrees anyone can be from the prime meridian is 180 degrees. This is because the prime meridian itself is located at 0 degrees longitude, and the maximum longitude value is 180 degrees both east and west. Therefore, any location can be a maximum of 180 degrees away from the prime meridian.
It would be 9pm.
No. The nearest point in Niger is about 0.17 degree away from the Prime Meridian, while the nearest point in Nigeria is about 2.66 degrees away.
There is no deviation of the Prime Meridian. There are a few deviations of the International Dateline, but none of them is anywhere near 3,000 miles away from the meridian of 180 degrees longitude.
Japan is a big place, and the Prime Meridian is a very long line. -- Sapporo, on the island of Hokkaido, is 141.3 degrees east of the Prime Meridian. If you travel straight west, the meridian is 6,020 miles (9,693 km) away. But if you travel to the closest point on the Prime Meridian, it's only 3,240 miles (5,214 km). -- Nagasaki, on the island of Honshu, is 129.8 degrees east of the Prime Meridian. If you travel straight west, the meridian is 6,860 miles (11,040 km) away. But if you travel to the closest point on the Prime Meridian, it's only 3,960 miles (6,373 km). The point on the Prime Meridian that's closest to both cities is . . . the North Pole.
Hatteras Island is at about 75.5 degrees west longitude. If you want to visit the Prime Meridian from North Carolina, the closest point is in the open sea about midway between Norway and Greenland, where the Prime Meridian is only 3,592 miles from Cape Hatteras.
No. Argentina is in South America, an ocean away from the Prime Meridian.
East and West technically don't end or begin, but there are lines of latitude that show where the Eastern and Western lines of latitude begin and end. The Prime Meridian, (0 degrees) runs through Greenwich, London, England, and any line of latitude away from it is labeled with the corresponding direction from the Prime Meridian. East and West lines end at 180 degrees, directly opposite the Prime Meridian.
The 180th meridian or antimeridian is the meridian which is 180° east or west of the Prime Meridian ... It is common to both east longitude and west longitude. It runs through the Pacific Ocean, and was the nominal guideline for the position of the International Dateline, although the dateline itself had to depart from the antimeridian in several places.
No. The meridian of 180° longitude ... exactly opposite the Prime Meridian and half a world away ... runs through the Aleutian chain.
The terminal building at Vancouver Intl is located at about 49.195° north latitude 123.178° west longitude. So if you travel straight east to the Prime Meridian, you have to cover 123.178° of longitude to get there. But . . . The Prime Meridian is a long line. It stretches half-way around the earth in the north-south direction. The point on the Prime Meridian that's closest to Vancouver Intl happens to be . . . the north Pole! To get there, you only have to cover 40.805° of latitude.