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he latitude of a region determines how much sunlight the area receives.
The equator is at the zero line of latitude.
about 2oo degrees
The North Pole is at 90 degrees North Latitude.
colour depends on how much sunlight is reflected and absorbed. White is the colour that reflects all sunlight, black is the colour that absorbs all sunlight.
Saint Louis, Missouri is at 38 degrees northern latitude and receives varied amounts of sunlight dpending on the season. Summer days can bring upwards of 14 hours of sunlight while winter days are much shorter, more like six to eight hours.
Mexico. Northwest of Mexico City. The degrees mean how much above the equator and how much west of England.
Your answer depends on where you are south of the Antarctic Circle -- 66 degrees S to the South Pole: 90 degrees S. There are 1,656 miles or 2,664 km between those two points of latitude. As well, it depends on the time of year, because the sunlight length every day is different. At the South Pole, for example, there are six months of sunlight and six months without sunlight. At the Antarctic Circle, there is one day -- December 21, with no sunset, and one day -- June 21, with no sunrise.
Not much. The seasons are driven primarily by how much direct sunlight the Earth receives at a given latitude.
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.
there is always sunlight everyday every night through day.
carrots need all the sunlight they could have because sunlight is most important to plants