The International Date Line is a line that joins the north and south poles,
and passes through all latitudes.
There are an infinite number of correct answers to the question. Any number
between negative 90° and positive 90° is one of them.
No, the international date line is a line of longitude, not latitude.
International date line
the international date line is 60 degrees. the prime meridan is 0.
The point where they cross is zero latitude / 180° longitude.
The International Dateline crosses ALL parallels of latitude. The Tropic of Capricorn is the parallel of roughly 23.5° south latitude.
No, the International Date Line is not used to measure latitude. It marks the boundary between one calendar day and the next, mostly following the 180° line of longitude. Latitude is measured north or south from the equator.
The International Dateline completely crosses both the northern and southern hemispheres. There's no position (latitude) in either hemisphere that's not on that line.
The International Date Line runs primarily along the 180 degree longitudinal line. The Equator runs along 0 degrees latitude. The lines intersect along in the middle of the Pacific Ocean (0 degrees North, 180 degrees West).
No. The prime meridian if on the side of the earth not the center. The prime meridian is the 0 latitude line. On the other side you have the 180 degree latitude line, sometimes called the international date line.
180 degrees, in either the east or west direction, at any latitude.
The International Date Line is NOMINALLY the meridian of 180 degrees longitude (both east and west).The actual date line has been defined with a few bumps and jogs in it that depart from 180 degrees, in order to avoid cutting through island nations. (That would have put two different calendar dates in the same country.)
no countries lies in international date line