The same as the number of different lengths on a 3-foot ruler.
Or, for that matter, on a 1-foot ruler.
The number is infinite. If you name two latitudes, then I can always name
another one that's between yours, no matter how close together yours are.
Don't be fooled by the latitude 'lines' that you see on some maps and globes.
That's certainly not the only latitudes there are, any more than the marks on
a ruler are the only possible lengths.
There are 90 degrees of latitude in the northern hemisphere, ranging from 0 degrees at the equator to 90 degrees at the North Pole.
Yes, Britain is in the Northern Hemisphere. It is located in the northern part of the world between latitudes 50° and 60° N.
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.
The taiga biome is generally found between latitudes 50° and 65° N in the Northern Hemisphere, and 50° and 65° S in the Southern Hemisphere. This corresponds to regions like northern North America, Scandinavia, and parts of Siberia.
there is a greater percentage of water surface in the southern hemisphere
There are 90 degrees of latitude in the northern hemisphere, ranging from 0 degrees at the equator to 90 degrees at the North Pole.
Northern latitudes are the latitudes between zero and 90° North ... that is, everything between the equator and the north pole, the region referred to as the "northern Hemisphere".
It is at that time, when the southern hemisphere is tilted toward the sun, that the northern hemisphere is tilted away from the sun.
Savanna areas occupy mostly southern hemisphere Tropical latitudes, but can exist in northern hemisphere.
Horse Latitudes
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.
All "north" latitudes are in the northern hemisphere.
The prevailing winds are different in different latitudes. In the mid-latitudes of the northern hemisphere, the prevailing winds are west to east. In the mid-latitudes of the southern hemisphere, the prevailing winds are from east to west.
I dont know
there is a greater percentage of water surface in the southern hemisphere
in high latitudes of the northern hemisphere especially in Eurasia and north america.
No, but southern constellations visible in Australia can't be seen in the Northern Hemisphere, so it all balances out.