You would be in the Temperate Zone between latitudes 30n and 60n.
That point is on Ellesmere Island in northern Canada, on the North American continent.
Bob
its latitude
the continent that includes the coordinated of 45n latitude and 115e longitude is Asia
Every parallel of latitude south of roughly 60.6° S crosses some part of Antarctica, and every latitude south of about 85.5° S is entirely on that continent.
That point is on Ellesmere Island in northern Canada, on the North American continent.
All lines of latitude cross the continent of Africa.
Most of the US is located on the North American continent. However, most of the US is not located on the same latitude. If this were true, the US would be one straight horizontal line.
It is on the North American continent Latitude and longitude: 38º 00' N and 97º 00' W
It is on the North American continent Latitude and longitude: 38º 00' N and 97º 00' W
First off, the one thing you MUST understand is that cattle are NOT plants, therefore not crops that are "cultivated." Secondly, latitude and the shape of the North American continent really have nothing to do with how cattle are raised or any of that sort of thing. Cattle are found all over the world in just about every latitude and longitude of the Earth you can imagine, except in the Arctic and the Antarctic. The North American continent can be a different shape and latitude (or rather, latitudes) and it wouldn't make a difference in how cattle, beef or dairy are raised or, as you like to say, "cultivated."
Bob
its latitude
the continent that includes the coordinated of 45n latitude and 115e longitude is Asia
You can find the Antarctic continent south of 60 degrees S. latitude.
Every parallel of latitude south of roughly 60.6° S crosses some part of Antarctica, and every latitude south of about 85.5° S is entirely on that continent.
"85 degrees south" is a latitude. Every point at that latitude is on the Antarctic continent.