North South
Of the twelve regular meridians, the yin meridians always flow up the body, and all the yang meridians always flow down.
Meridians join the Poles of the Earth and intersect the equator at right angles, thus the direction is North/South.
All 'Meridians' converge at the Poles. No lines of Longitude do (they go 'around' the globe).
north-south
go count
Meridians of longitude run from pole to pole Parallels of latitude run east-west
Meridians are typically shown as straight lines radiating out from the center point of the polar projection map. They converge at the poles and represent lines of longitude, which help to indicate direction and location on the map. These meridians help users navigate and understand the spatial relationships on the polar projection.
No geographic mapping lines go "through" the poles. The meridians of longitude are semi-circles that join the poles, so the ends of the meridians are at the poles.
No geographic mapping lines go "through" the poles. The meridians of longitude are semi-circles that join the poles, so the ends of the meridians are at the poles.
"Meridians" are the [straight] lines of Latitude (vertical, North-South lines) on a map, and Longitudes are the circular lines (horizontal, East-West) going around the world. So there can not be "Meridians of Longitude" that converge at a poll.
Lines of longitude are also known as meridians. They run north-south and measure east-west.
Meridians are lines on a sphere (or other geometric solid) all of which go through the poles. Degrees are a unit of measurement of angles and temperature and concentration, and some other things. As a unit for measuring angles, meridians are measured in degrees. There are 360 degrees in a complete circle.