The equator (zero degrees latitude) is a line halfway between the North Pole (90 degrees N latitude) and the South Pole (90 degrees S latitude). Any point on the equator is equidistant from the poles.
The line from the equator to either pole is 1/4 of the way
around the Earth, so it's 90° of latitude.
You're thinking of the Equator.
Equator
The latitude of any point on Earth that's halfway between the equator and the north pole is 45° North. On any randomly chosen map or globe, there may or may not be a line printed to show that latitude.
The Equator is the imaginary line halfway between the North and South Poles and is at zero degrees latitude. It divides the Earth into North and South Hemispheres and is equidistant from the North Pole and South Pole. The Sun appears directly above the Equator at the Autumn and Spring equinox.The equator.the equator.
45 degrees north
The north pole is 90 degrees north latitude. The south pole is 90 degrees south latitude. When you travel from one pole to the other, you go through 180 degrees of latitude. Which isn't so surprising, since that trip takes you halfway around the world.
Line of latitude 45 N is often called the halfway point between the Equator and the North Pole. But, actually, the true halfway point is 16.2 kilometres (10.1 mi) north of the 45 N line of latitude.
45° North.
45° North.
The Tropic of Cancer
45o North.
That would be 45° North latitude.
45° North.
The latitude of any point on Earth that's halfway between the equator and the north pole is 45° North. On any randomly chosen map or globe, there may or may not be a line printed to show that latitude.
45
The Equator is the imaginary line halfway between the North and South Poles and is at zero degrees latitude. It divides the Earth into North and South Hemispheres and is equidistant from the North Pole and South Pole. The Sun appears directly above the Equator at the Autumn and Spring equinox.The equator.the equator.
That would be 45 degrees north.
45 degrees north
The north pole is 90 degrees north latitude. The south pole is 90 degrees south latitude. When you travel from one pole to the other, you go through 180 degrees of latitude. Which isn't so surprising, since that trip takes you halfway around the world.