pressure belts
Global winds
86 ℉
30 degrees Celsius = 86 degrees Fahrenheit.
First you need to convert from Ohms to Fahrenheit.
Yes. Snow is basically frozen rain. Water freezes at 32 degrees F.
It can snow at 36 degrees, but it will not accumulate on the ground. There is no set temperature for snow to begin, therefore there has been snowfall recorded at temperature in the high 30s.
Texas occupies the range of latitudes from 25.84°N to 36.50°N. So, out of the range of 10.66 degrees of latitude that it actually covers, 6.5 degrees of that is in the range specified in the question.
Yes. And that range of latitude in South America also includes part of Brazil and all of Uruguay.
New South Wales was not split in 1788. It was claimed for England, and its boundaries extended from Cape York, in the latitude of ten degrees thirty-seven minutes south, to South Cape, at forty-three degrees thirty-nine minutes south and west to the one hundred and thirty-fifth degree of east longitude. It included all the islands adjacent in the Pacific Ocean to ten degrees thirty-seven minutes south and forty-three degrees thirty-nine minutes south.
Celsius :P
That point is in the sea just off the coast of Morocco. It's about 25 miles northwest of Tiznit,and about 39 miles southwest of Agadir.
The temperature "thirty degrees Celsius" is written as 30°C
In the USA, only four states have any territory at 30 degrees north latitude or south of it. They are Florida, Louisiana, Texas, and Hawaii. Any others are states of Mexico, nations of Central and South America, the south Pacific, southern Asia, or Africa.
That point is offshore in the Gulf of Mexico, about 47 miles due south of the Battleship Parkway and I-10 bridges across the bay at Mobile, Alabama.
The thirty-second parallel is a circle of latitude that is 32 degrees south of the Earth's equatorial plane. It passes through various countries including Australia, Chile, and South Africa.
An angle of thirty-five degrees, and any angle less than 90 degrees is an acute angle.
The border of New South Wales was moved several times.When James Cook first claimed the eastern coast of the Australian continent for England and named it New South Wales, it extended from latitude 38 degrees S to latitude 10.5 degrees S, from the tip of Cape York to where he first sighted the continent, in what is now far eastern Victoria.When Captain Arthur Phillip led the First Fleet, according to his journals, he was required to extend the boundary of NSW “... extending from the Northern Cape or extremity of the coast called Cape York, in the latitude of ten degrees thirty-seven minutes south, to the southern extremity of the said territory of New South Wales or South Cape, in the latitude of forty-three degrees thirty-nine minutes south and of all the country inland westward as far as the one hundred and thirty-fifth degree of east longitude reckoning from the meridian of Greenwich, including all the islands adjacent in the Pacific Ocean within the latitudes aforesaid of ten degrees thirty-seven minutes south and forty-three degrees thirty-nine minutes south”. He also included Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania) within the boundary of New South Wales. At this time, Van Diemen's Land was not known to be an island.In 1825, Governor Ralph Darling extended the western boundary of New South Wales to 129 degrees E.
Yes it is, as long as you're talking about the same latitude in both cases. 30 degrees east or west of the Prime Meridian corresponds to 2071.2 miles along the equator. As you leave the equator and travel north or south, 30 degrees either side of the Prime Meridian shrinks steadily, and becomes zero miles at the poles.