Every latitude on Earth has a point on the 0° meridian (the PrimeMeridian).
That's like asking "How many lengths are there on a ruler ?" 'Latitude' is an angle used to describe locations on the Earth's surface. All locations on Earth have latitudes between zero and positive 90 degrees, or between zero and negative 90 degrees. How many numbers can you think of between -90 and +90 ? That's how many different latitudes there are.
there are 90 degrees of latitudes in northern hemisphere
There can be infinitely many, but to be specific in number 181. To increase accuracy one can divide it further.
47. The tropics are at latitudes corresponding to the Earth's axial tilt (23.5 degrees), so the distance between them is twice that.
Norway is a big place. It occupies all latitudes in the range of about 58° to 71.1° north.
The latitudes of places on Earth cover a range of 180 degrees ... from -90 at thesouth pole to +90 at the north pole.Within that range, there are an infinite number of different possible latitudes,just as there are an infinite number of possible lengths on a ruler, regardless ofhow many of them are marked on different rulers, maps, or globes. There is nostandard set of marks.
It would depend on the specific map. On a globe, there are an unlimited number of specific latitudes between 0 and 90 degrees north (equator to North Pole) and 0 and 90 degrees south (equator to South Pole). Longitudes range from 0 to 180 east and 0 to 180 west from the Prime Meridian, with 180 east and 180 west being the same line (on which the International Date Line is based). The total circumference of the planet is 360 degrees, and it would appear as a circle viewed from above either of the poles. Each degree of longitude is about 111.32 kilometers wide at the equator. Degrees can be divided further into minutes and seconds, or to any accuracy of decimal degrees.
Pirate Latitudes has 313 pages.
Blue Latitudes has 480 pages.
there are 181 latitudes.90 latitudes above equator+90 latitudes below the equator +equator.90+90+1=181
In order to travel through all possible latitudes, you'd have to travel all the waybetween the Earth's poles. That's half-way around the globe, or 180 degrees.
Normally, when you say "between", we expect to hear you name two places.We're still waiting for the second one.