Meridians.
They are also called lines of longitude. They are not parallel. They help define a position and a time.
meridians
Yes, lines of longitude are also known as meridians. For example: 0° longitude is the the prime meridian.
Lines of longitude are often called "meridians", but never "parallels". "Parallels" are lines of constant latitude.
Longitude is the best term, but sometimes meridian is used. The line of longitude at zero degrees is the Prime Meridian.
These invisible lines that circle the earth and are vertical or running north to south are longitude or meridian lines. These lines are also perpendicular to lines called latitudes that are parallel to the equator.
Lines of longitude are also called meridians.
Imaginary lines that circle the earth from east to west are called lines of longitude, or meridians. These lines help define the distance east or west of the prime meridian, which is located in Greenwich, England.
Every point on a meridian has the same longitude.
yesYes.
meridians are also called longitude because they are the same word and they have the same meaning they just came up with another word for longitude
The so-called 'lines' of longitude are also called 'meridians'. The Prime Meridian is a line of longitude. It's the line made out of all the points on Earth whose longitude is zero.