lines of latitude, also known as parallels
Lines of latitude are imaginary lines used to measure distances north and south of the Equator or 0 degrees.
both latitide as horizontal and longitude as vertical
The imaginary lines perpendicular to the equator are called longitudinal lines or longitude. The lines parallel to the equator are called latitudinal lines or latitude. Yes. they are.
false
Equator and AxisThey
Measured by imaginary lines numbered in degrees
greenwich meridian
Lines of latitude are imaginary lines used to measure distances north and south of the Equator or 0 degrees.
both latitide as horizontal and longitude as vertical
The imaginary lines perpendicular to the equator are called longitudinal lines or longitude. The lines parallel to the equator are called latitudinal lines or latitude. Yes. they are.
Longitudinal or longitude lines are the imaginary lines that are perpendicular to the equator. Latitudinal or latitude lines are parallel to the equator.
The Equator is numbered 0 degrees and the north and south poles are each 90 degrees - so the range is between 0 and 90 degrees.
Latitude lines are imaginary lines that are parallel to the equator to fix a position on earth (along with longitude lines which are imaginary lines perpendicular to the equator)
There is no intersection. These two imaginary lines are parallel. Every point on the Tropic of Cancer is 23.5 degrees from the equator, no more and no less. The lines don't meet.
false
The equator and the lines of longitude.
They are lines of latitude.