There are four hemispheres. The Northern Hemisphere and Southern Hemisphere is divided by the Equator. The Western Hemisphere and Eastern Hemisphere is divided by the Prime Meridian.The Equator is zero degrees latitude. The Prime Meridian is zero degrees longitude.
There are four hemispheres on Earth: Northern Hemisphere, Southern Hemisphere, Eastern Hemisphere, and Western Hemisphere. These divisions are based on lines of latitude and longitude that run across the Earth's surface.
The Earth is divided into four parts based on the intersections of the equator (latitude) and the prime meridian (longitude). These parts are the Northern Hemisphere, Southern Hemisphere, Eastern Hemisphere, and Western Hemisphere.
Latitudes in the northern hemisphere range from zero at the equator to 90°North at the north pole. You're free to draw as few or as many lines on your map or globe within that range as you feel it ought to have.
There are about 166 countries in the Northern Hemisphere
The Equator is at 0 degrees latitude. The South Pole is at the centre of the Southern Hemisphere. The South Pole is at 90 degrees S latitude. Every line of latitude between 0 and 90 S are in the Southern Hemisphere.
There are 180 degrees of latitude in both the eastern and western hemispheres.
There are four hemispheres. The Northern Hemisphere and Southern Hemisphere is divided by the Equator. The Western Hemisphere and Eastern Hemisphere is divided by the Prime Meridian.The Equator is zero degrees latitude. The Prime Meridian is zero degrees longitude.
The northern and southern Hemispheres each consist of a range of 90 degrees of latitude. They meet at the equator ... it's the boundary between them. There's no gap between them at the equator, so if you wanted to, you could go to the equator and stand with one foot in each hemisphere. Each hemisphere is shaped like ... like ... like a hemisphere. That's like half of a grapefruit. Their edges fit together to make a complete sphere, and the distance between them at their edges, as well as the angle between them, is zero.
The northern and southern Hemispheres each comprise 90 degrees of latitude. On your map or globe, you're free to draw as few or as many lines as you'd like to see in that range. There is no standard set of 'lines'.
depends on the northern hemisphere and the latitude of pie.........any more ??????
Depends on how you count it. If you take it as 90 degrees north and 90 degrees south, that's 180 degrees of latitude. Looking at just one hemisphere, then just 90 degrees will do it.
There are 90 degrees of latitude in each half of the globe.
there are 180 degrees of latitudes 90 in each hemisphere 181 in total counting the equator
There are four hemispheres on Earth: Northern Hemisphere, Southern Hemisphere, Eastern Hemisphere, and Western Hemisphere. These divisions are based on lines of latitude and longitude that run across the Earth's surface.
The Earth is divided into four parts based on the intersections of the equator (latitude) and the prime meridian (longitude). These parts are the Northern Hemisphere, Southern Hemisphere, Eastern Hemisphere, and Western Hemisphere.
The Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn are separated in latitude by roughly 47 degrees. You're free to draw as many or as few lines in that interval as would please you. Since they're drawn at equal latitudes north and south, the average of their latitudes is zero, and the imaginary line that represents their average latitude is the equator.