There was no area other than desert located at those exactly, however, the nearest city would be Faya-Largeau.
90 degrees north, and 90 degrees south.
That's hard to say, since the largest possible longitude, east or west, is 180 degrees.
Latitude is the horizontal line of a map. It can go up to 180 Degrees North or 180 degrees South the Equator lies at 0 Degrees
There is no such location because the maximum degree of latitude is 90 degrees.
180 degrees east or 180 degrees west (same point_ and 23.5 degrees north
An angle that is between 90 degrees and 180 degrees is called an obtuse angle. Ex. : 175 degrees, 140 degrees.
175 degrees is an obtuse angle because it is greater than 90 but less than 180 degrees
90 degrees north, and 90 degrees south.
its not a polygon, it has 2 be at least 180 degrees
First of all, there really is no such longitude as "185 degrees west". Longitudes are only labeled from zero to 180°, both east and west. If you start at zero (the Prime Meridian) and travel 185 degrees west, the longitude you arrive at is marked "175° east". 41° north/175° east is the location of a whole bunch of water. It's at sea in the Pacific Ocean, about 1,940 miles east-northeast of Tokyo and 2,080 miles northwest of Honolulu.
360 total, 180 degrees west of prime meridian, and 180 degrees east. There are 180 degrees of latitude, 90 degrees north of the equator, and 90 degrees south.
180 - 175 = 5
It is Antarctica which can range from 60 to 90 degrees south and 180 degrees west to 175 degrees east.
180 degrees
That's hard to say, since the largest possible longitude, east or west, is 180 degrees.
Term What angle is between 90 and 180 Definition 1/20 An angle that is between 90 degrees and 180 degrees is called an obtuse angle. Ex. : 175 degrees, 140 degrees
Presumably you mean each interior angle measures 175 degrees if so then it will have 72 sides because angles on a straight line add up to 180 degees 180-175 = 5 degrees (the exterior angle) The exterior angles of the polgon add up to 360 degrees 360/5 = 72 sides