USA
A set of latitude/longitude coordinates describes a single point on the Earth's
surface, so it's not possible for a whole country to be exactly right there.
The point described by these coordinates is located on the Wyoming/Montana
state line, about 3.4 miles south-southeast of Ridge MT and 8 miles northeast
of Rockypoint WY.
This point is one of a truly huge number of points in the USA. All of the others
have different coordinates.
A set of latitude/longitude coordinates describes the location of a single point,
so it's not possible for an entire country to be right there.
The point 45° North/105° West is located on the boundary line that separates
the states of Wyoming and Montana, in the USA. Any point that's IN Wyoming
or IN Montana, or anywhere else in the USA, has different coordinates.
That point is on the boundary between the states of Montana and Wyoming,
specifically roughly midway between the towns of Ridge and Rockypoint. Both
of those towns and both of those states are in the country of the USA.
" 45° N / 105° W " is a point on the border between Wyoming and Montana, about
46 miles west of the North Dakota / South Dakota borders.
All of these features are in the continental USA ... a country that never comes
anywhere near either the equator or the Prime Meridian.
When you mention a latitude and longitude, you have nailed the location down to a
single point on the Earth's surface, without length, width, or area. So although the
point may be found IN a country, it's not possible for an entire country to be found
exactly there.
The point 45N/105W is located along the border between the states of Wyoming and Montana,
in the USA. There are also an infinite number of other points within the USA whose latitudes are
NOT 45N and/or whose longitudes are NOT 105W.
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The zero meridian is a line more than 12,000 miles long, between the north and south poles. There are literally trillions of places on it. The line is called the "Prime Meridian".
0 degrees longitude, which runs through Greenwich is called the "prime meridian."
The name given to the imaginary line of zero longitude on the earth's surface is the "Prime Meridian" or "Greenwich Meridian". It's a line that joins the North and South Poles, and crosses a spot on the floor of the room that houses the zenith telescope at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, London, England. As it runs through Greenwich (the observatory site), it is also called the Greenwich Meridian.Time is often expressed in terms of Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), which is related to Universal Coordinated Time (UTC).
The equator is defined as zero latitude, and it crosses all longitudes. The Prime Meridian is defined as zero longitude, and it crosses all latitudes.
The 0 degree line of Latitude is called the Equator.
It is 0 degrees.
The zero meridian is a line more than 12,000 miles long, between the north and south poles. There are literally trillions of places on it. The line is called the "Prime Meridian".
The place name associated with the 0 degree meridian is Greenwich, London, United Kingdom. This is where the Prime Meridian is located and is considered the starting point for measuring longitude. The Royal Observatory in Greenwich marks the spot where the Prime Meridian passes through.
It was chosen as the base 0 degree meridian for longitude.
0 degrees longitude, which runs through Greenwich is called the "prime meridian."
0 degree longitude is is called the Prime Meridian.
The earth is divided into the Northern and Southern hemispheres by the equator. It is divided into the Eastern and Western hemispheres by the Greenwich meridian and the 180 degree longitude. These then form the NE, NW, SE and SW quadrants.
The Prime Meridian, at 0 degrees longitude, runs through Greenwich, London, UK.
The Greenwich Meridian, aka The Prime Meridian, is the zero meridian. On the opposite site of the Prime Meridian there is the 180 degrees meridian.Anything from the 180 degrees to Greenwich is the Eastern hemisphere and from the Greenwich to the 180 degree the Western Hemisphere.The Prime Meridian.The Prime Meridian - which runs through the town of Greenwich, in England.western hemispherewhat are three tipes of regions into which the Western Hemisphere can be dividedThe Greenwich meridian divides the Earth into eastern and western hemispheres.EquatorThe prime meridian! I don't know if i spelled that rightPrime Meridianprime meridianThe Prime Meridian which runs from Pole to Pole and passes through Greenwich, England.The greenwich meridianThe line of longitude that separates the eastern and western hemispheres is known as the Prime Meridian. The Prime Meridian is 0 degrees longitude.The hemispheres are divided along 0° longitude line and the 180° longitude line. ==========The Equator divides the Earth into northern and southern hemispheres.The Prime Meridian divides the Earth into eastern and western hemispheres.There is also a Magnetic Meridian which divides the Earth into its north and south poles based on the magnetism of the Earth.The full circle formed by the Prime Meridian and the meridian of180° longitude separates the eastern and western hemispheres.lines of latitude and longitude , it is called a "Equator" . the states that live near the equator is usually one of the hottest statesThe answer is the EquatorThe western and eastern hemispheres are separated by the Prime Meridian, the zero line of longitude, that passes through the Greenwich Observatory, London, UK.The prime meridian (which is zero degrees longitude and runs through Greenwich, England) and 180 degrees longitude (the International Date Line runs near, though not exactly nor exactly parallel to that line of longitude).my butn is the answer oh yeah hoot root park my car batyPrime meridianThe full circle formed by the Prime Meridian and the meridian of 180° longitude separates the eastern and western hemispheres.The "Pizza Line"the prime meridian and the antimerdianThe meridians of 0° (The Prime or Greenwich Meridian) and 180° longitude (sometimes called the antimeridian, roughly the International Date Line) separate the eastern and western hemispheres. Technically anything west of the "Prime Meridian," which is zero longitude and runs through London (Greenwich Royal Observatory), is in the Western Hemisphere, and anything to the east of the Prime is in the Eastern Hemisphere.In contrast, the equator separates the northern and southern hemispheres.equatorThe aortaThe Prime Meridian. the Equator splits the Northern and Southern HemispheresThe prime meridian (0*) dides the earth into eastern and western.Prime MeridianPrime meridianjbjb* * * * *The Greenwich Meridian and its "continuation" on the other side of the earth which is approximately the International Date Line.prime meridianThe prime meridian and the 180 degrees longitude line are used to define the imaginary boundaries of Western Hemisphere. This convention is in use since 1884.Prime (Greenwich) Meridianprime meridianThe Prime (or Greenwich) Meridian in England divides the earth into the east & west hemispheres.Prime Meridian~The Prime Meridian~the equatorprime meridean
I believe you're thinking of the Greenwich Observatory in London, England.
This is called the Prime Meridian, which passes through Greenwich, England.
The name given to the imaginary line of zero longitude on the earth's surface is the "Prime Meridian" or "Greenwich Meridian". It's a line that joins the North and South Poles, and crosses a spot on the floor of the room that houses the zenith telescope at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, London, England. As it runs through Greenwich (the observatory site), it is also called the Greenwich Meridian.Time is often expressed in terms of Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), which is related to Universal Coordinated Time (UTC).