A longitude of 210 degrees means that you are measuring longitude from 0 to 360 degrees, which is fine, but very often people use -180 to +180 degrees, also called 180 degrees west to 180 degrees east instead.
210 degrees longitude is the same as 150 degrees west. You would pass French Polynesia and you would then make a landfall in Alaska in the USA which is in North America.
There are only 180 degrees in the longitude line from Antarctica to the north pole, or 360 degrees back to the south pole.
In order to answer your query, we need a cross-notation for the latitude.
The longitude is measured as the angle east or west from the Prime Meridian, ranging from 0 degrees at the Prime Meridian to +180 eastward and -180 westward. +210 degrees can be represented as the meridian that is 30 degrees east of the antimeridan. In other words, this line passes the international date line and becomes -150 degrees or 150W. Traveling north along this meridian takes you to Tahiti or the French Polynesia islands. Keep traveling north would intersect with North American continent.
I was about to say that it depends whether you mean 210 east or west longitude.
Fortunately, I quickly got a grip on myself, when I realized that there is no such thing
as 210 longitude. Longitudes are only marked from zero to 180 east, and from zero
to 180 west, with 180 east and west being the same meridian.
Heading East from the Prime Meridian (zero longitude) the scale is zero to 180 degrees. 180 degrees is the International Date Line on the other side of the World. Heading West from the Prime Meridian (zero Longitude) the scale is zero to 180 degrees, and meeting up with the International Date Line. Therefore, 330 degrees longitude does not exist. Whichever degrees of longitude is used, it is either to the West or East of the Prime Meridian.
33 West is all open ocean until you hit Greenland, which is part of North America.
33 East crosses Africa and Eastern Europe.
The Earth rotates at the rate of roughly 15 degrees of longitude per hour.
The Earth rotates at the rate of roughly 15 degrees of longitude per hour.
Yes.
All the way around anything is a trip of 360 degrees. If you do it again, your total doubles to 720 degrees.
There are 24 time zones. Divide 360 degrees longitude by 24 and you get 15 degrees for each one-hour time zone.
Tourists to Antarctica maintain residency on the ships used to travel to the continent. There are no commercial facilities on the Antarctic continent.
A longitude of 210 degrees means that you are measuring longitude from 0 to 360 degrees, which is fine, but very often people use -180 to +180 degrees, also called 180 degrees west to 180 degrees east instead. 210 degrees longitude is the same as 150 degrees west. You would pass French Polynesia and you would then make a landfall in Alaska in the USA which is in North America.
When you travel south from South Africa, you will reach the continent of Antarctica.
Antarctica is a continent; the Antarctic is the region on earth where Antarctica is located. So in traveling to Antarctica, you are automatically in the the Antarctic.
Antarctica
You can travel to Antarctica by ship or by airplane. There are commercial ships that operate tours to the continent, however, there is no commercial air service to anywhere on the continent.
Your visa requirements in order to visit Antarctica are based on the requirements of the countries through which you travel to access the continent. Antarctica has no sovereignty, and thus, no requirement for travel papers.
The Earth rotates at the rate of roughly 15 degrees of longitude per hour.
Once on the continent, which he reached by sailing ship, Scott trekked Antarctica on foot.
The citizenship documentation required to visit Antarctica is dictated by your route to the continent. If you pass through no country on your journey, no visa is required per se to travel to Antarctica.
If you head south from South America you would reach the continent of Antarctica.
Ships were - and still are - used to travel to the continent.