180 degrees.
Between 23.5° south latitude and 23.5° north latitude.
Europe extends from the Arctic south to around 35° north latitude. North America extends from the Arctic south to around 8° north latitude.
There are 180 degrees of latitude between the poles.
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.
180
Latitude measure North to South. This is a much more appropriate answer. Latitude measures the angle between your horizon and a polar star. Which in turn provides a measurement in degrees north or south of the Equator.
latitude runs east to west longitude runs north to south
It's called a "pole" of the Earth's axis. "90° North latitude" is the north pole. "90° South latitude" is the south pole.
90 degrees north latitude is the definition of the Earth's north pole. 90 degrees south latitude is the definition of the Earth's south pole. They're a little more than 12,000 miles apart.
90 degrees north latitude and the south pole is 90 degrees south latitude
No line of latitude is a north/south line. A move to the north or south is a change of latitude.
latitude runs north to south and longitude runs to east to west so dont get it mix up