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All meridians of longitude join the Earth's north and south pole, so the length of every meridian is 1/2 of the Earth's polar circumference.
Every meridian of constant longitude joins the Earth's north and south poles, so the length of each meridian is 1/2 of the Earth's polar circumference.
It doesn't. The north pole and the north magnetic pole are miles apart.
Every meridian of longitude is a semi-circle that joins the north and south poles. So the length of each one is 1/2 of the earth's polar circumference, about 12,400 miles. (rounded)
A meridian is a line of constant longitude, i.e., it's the line formed by all points on the earth's surface that have the same longitude. Every meridian joins the north and south poles, and is a semi-circle whose length is 1/2 the earth's polar circumference.
The Prime Meridian only extends from the North Pole to the South Pole along the 0° longitude line,which is only half of the Earth's circumference.The circumference of the Earth that includes the Prime Meridian is a polar circumference measuring approximately 40,008 km (about 24,860 miles), which is shorter than the equatorial circumference by about 67 km (42 miles), not including elevation above or below MSL.
All meridians of longitude join the Earth's north and south pole, so the length of every meridian is 1/2 of the Earth's polar circumference.
Every meridian of constant longitude joins the Earth's north and south poles, so the length of each meridian is 1/2 of the Earth's polar circumference.
It doesn't. The north pole and the north magnetic pole are miles apart.
Every meridian of longitude is a semi-circle that joins the north and south poles. So the length of each one is 1/2 of the earth's polar circumference, about 12,400 miles. (rounded)
A meridian is a line of constant longitude, i.e., it's the line formed by all points on the earth's surface that have the same longitude. Every meridian joins the north and south poles, and is a semi-circle whose length is 1/2 the earth's polar circumference.
All meridians of longitude join the Earth's north and south poles. So they all have the same length ... half of the Earth's polar circumference, or about 24,800 miles.
Mmm, well the Earth is round and not square, so it cannot be measure in a flat line, but has to be measured along the curve or around the circumference. The circumference of the Earth at the Equator, its widest point is 40,075 km (East/ West measurement). Its meridian circumference is 40,007 km (North/ South measurement - North Pole through the South Pole and back to the North Pole); which means the Earth is a little "shorter" than it is wide. There are 100 cm in 1 meter, multiply this by 1000 meters and you have 100,000 cm in 1 kilometer. Therefore: The equatorial circumference of the Earth is: 40,075 km x 100,000 cm = 4,007,500,000 cm The meridian circumference of the Earth is: 40,007 km x 100,000 cm = 4,000,700,000 cm; if you divide this by 2, this will give you the distance from the North Pole to the South Pole in cm, which is 2,000,350,000 cm
Every meridian of longitude connects the north and south poles. Its length is 1/2 of the earth's polar circumference ... about 19,970 km / 12,409 miles.
A line of longitude is also called a meridian. Meridians are half-great-circles that join the Earth's North and South Poles. So they represent one-half of a polar circumference of the planet. The Prime Meridian runs through England (Greenwich) and is 0 degrees longitude.
Every meridian of constant longitude joins the north and south poles, so its length is half of the Earth's polar circumference, or about 20,004 Km (12,430 miles).
The equator is the imaginary central line that runs east and west along the earth, whereas, the prime meridian runs north and south. If we follow the equator we must move to the east and then north to arrive at the United Kingdom.Therefore the U.K. is located northeast from the equator.