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Every place has its own unique latitude and longitude, so other than China, no other place can have the same latitude and longitude as itself.
The equator is a latitude line, so it has no specific longitude. The equator is at 0o north or south. There are many points on the equator, so every point on the equator has a different longitude.
47° 30' 0" N / 19° 5' 0" E. so there is your latitude and longitude of Budapest,Hungry
Antarctica is the continent located around the South Pole. So, any latitude south of 75S, for EVERY longitude, is on Antarctica.
Latitude and longitude are numbers that describe the location of a point on the Earth's surface. A nickel is not nailed down, so you can move it around to any place on Earth, drop it on the ground, and give it any latitude and longitude you want.
Every place has its own unique latitude and longitude, so other than China, no other place can have the same latitude and longitude as itself.
longitude and latitude are more scientific words so it makes them seem smarter
Yes, they do. Every planet has a Prime Meridian and an Equater, so all planets have latitude and longitude.
The equator is a latitude line, so it has no specific longitude. The equator is at 0o north or south. There are many points on the equator, so every point on the equator has a different longitude.
47° 30' 0" N / 19° 5' 0" E. so there is your latitude and longitude of Budapest,Hungry
The latitude is either N or S, and the longitude is either E or W. The system was made like that so that any point anywhere on Earth can be exactly located with one latitude and one longitude.
No. Latitude and longitude are angles, and angles have no physical units. So the numbers are the same regardless of what system of units you like.
Antarctica is the continent located around the South Pole. So, any latitude south of 75S, for EVERY longitude, is on Antarctica.
Latitude and longitude are numbers that describe the location of a point on the Earth's surface. A nickel is not nailed down, so you can move it around to any place on Earth, drop it on the ground, and give it any latitude and longitude you want.
Latitude and longitude represent arcs on the surface of a sphere (the Earth), so they're angles, and they're described in angle units.
yes it does because on a map there are longitude and latitude lines all over the place so YES!
Longitude and latitude are angles, so it is fitting that they be described in units of angle.