Well, that's question that doesn't have an answer in exactly the form it was asked,
because there's no 'set' of latitudes to go from one to the next. It's like asking
"How far is it between each height ?"
One degree of latitude is roughly 69.11 miles, but latitudes can be measured down to
a difference of less than an inch.
One minute of latitude is about 1.15 miles, or 6082 feet, and one second of latitude
is about 0.0192 mile, or 101.4 feet.
Stick a pencil into the ground, and a good surveyor can measure its latitude
down to less than 0.001 second.
About 69.2 miles (111.3 km).
About 69 miles.
Each degree of latitude is 69 miles apart. The range varies because of the Earth's shape, from 68.7 at the equator to 69.4 at the poles
-- Each degree of latitude, anywhere on Earth, is about 69 miles in a north or south direction. -- Each degree of longitude covers a different distance, depending on the latitude. At the poles, any number of degrees of longitude cover zero distance.
-- Since every point on a line of latitude has the same latitude, the line has no thickness. -- Its length depends on its latitude. -- The line at zero latitude, known as the 'equator', is a great circle and so its length is the circumference of the Earth ... about 24,900 miles. -- Every other line of latitude is a small circle. Its length is 24,900 miles times the cosine of the latitude which it marks. -- The distance between any latitude and the one that's 1° north or south of it is about 111.1 kilometers (69 miles).
1 degree of latitude is about 111 km or about 69 miles. Anywhere.
1,036.65 miles
It depends on what latitude you're on. At 90o latitude, there are 0 miles between them. At the Equator, there are slightly over 69 miles between the earth's longitudes per degree of arc.
Each degree of latitude is 69 miles apart. The range varies because of the Earth's shape, from 68.7 at the equator to 69.4 at the poles
At those points on the surface of the Earth, a degree is approximately 69 miles.
90 degrees.
-- Each degree of latitude, anywhere on Earth, is about 69 miles in a north or south direction. -- Each degree of longitude covers a different distance, depending on the latitude. At the poles, any number of degrees of longitude cover zero distance.
-- Since every point on a line of latitude has the same latitude, the line has no thickness. -- Its length depends on its latitude. -- The line at zero latitude, known as the 'equator', is a great circle and so its length is the circumference of the Earth ... about 24,900 miles. -- Every other line of latitude is a small circle. Its length is 24,900 miles times the cosine of the latitude which it marks. -- The distance between any latitude and the one that's 1° north or south of it is about 111.1 kilometers (69 miles).
1 degree of latitude is about 111 km or about 69 miles. Anywhere.
1,036.65 miles
69 miles
1 degree of latitude =70 miles (112 km)
About 69 miles
depends on the globe you look at