Antarctica is the continent located nearest to 80 degrees south latitude. At this latitude, the majority of the continent is covered by the vast Antarctic ice sheet, making it the southernmost continent on Earth.
There is no continent north of Alaska*. But, if you kept going north, you would cross the border from going north to south, or vice versa. Then you would be going south, and hit Asia. *Arctica (North Pole) is not a continent
Going clockwise... 210 degrees. Going anti-clockwise... 150 degrees.
"Across the continent" typically refers to going from one side of a continent to the other, usually implying a long distance travel journey.
Transcontinental means crossing or going across the continent.
there is 90 degrees of north latitude.There are 90 degrees of latitude going north from the Equator
I'm afraid there isn't a city which is 110 degrees north. 90 degrees north is the North Pole and if you keep going past the number just starts going down again.
67 degress is probably the highest it going to get. 37 is going to be the lowest it will get.
Australia
It's tough to figure out what this question is getting at, because there arean infinite number of parallels of latitude, not three.I'm going to take a wild guess: The question is referring to the three parallelsthat have names and are grouped in the middle of the globe, where they're mostnoticeable . . . the Equator, the Tropic of Cancer, and the Tropic of Capricorn.All three of those parallels cross the continent of Africa.You're welcome. And if that's not the intent of the question, then it seems to methat the question is otherwise quite meaningless.
You're going for "latitude". But it's an 'angle', not a 'distance in degrees'.
Assuming you are going from Celsius to Fahrenheit, it is 101.48 degrees F.