360 degrees. From Greenwich (London) 180 degrees west and 180 degrees east.
The total number of degrees in the tropic zones is 47 degrees, 23.5 degrees north of the equator and 23.5 degrees south of the equator.
90 Degrees in total, if wou were to go from pole to pole it would be 180 Degrees
90 degrees north of the equator, and 90 degrees south of the equator. Total: 180 degrees, from pole to pole.
90° north of the equator, and another 90° south of it, for a total of 180°.
There are 36 parallels (lines of latitude) at an interval of 5 degrees from the equator to the poles. The parallels range from 0 degrees at the equator to 90 degrees at the poles, which gives a total of 18 degrees in each hemisphere. Thus, when counting both the northern and southern hemispheres, the total comes to 36.
360 total, 180 degrees west of prime meridian, and 180 degrees east. There are 180 degrees of latitude, 90 degrees north of the equator, and 90 degrees south.
The equator is 90 degrees of latitude from both poles.
Zero degrees
The south pole is 90 degrees south of the equator. The north pole is 90 degrees north of the equator.
A globe can have parallels drawn at 10-degree intervals ranging from 0 degrees at the Equator to 90 degrees at the poles. Since there are 180 degrees of latitude (90 degrees north and 90 degrees south), this results in a total of 19 parallels in each hemisphere, plus the Equator, making 39 parallels in total.
23.5
The Equator is the latitude line with a given value of 0-degrees. There Equator runs completely around the Earth. There are 360-longitude lines that intersect the Equator.