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The Prime Meridian is an imaginary line that joins the north and south poles. It's

over 12,000 miles long, passes through every latitude on Earth, and crosses the

Sahara desert, Antarctica, and a bunch of other places. So you could probably find

every climate and temperature on Earth somewhere along it.

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12y ago
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13y ago

Since the prime meridian runs up and down the Earth, I'd say it has no exact temperature all year around, like the equator; but it does run through Greenwich (pronounced Grin_itch), England, so it'd be fairly cold there.

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10y ago

The Prime Meridian connects the north and south poles, and is roughly 12,400

miles long. It passes through areas of every possible climate, from polar ice cap

and tundra, through mountains, rivers, valleys, maritime coastal, interior deserts

including the vast Sahara, and equatorial rain forests. Average temperatures on

Earth loosely coincide with latitude, and the Prime Meridian covers all latitudes.

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9y ago

Prime Meridian has different weather depending on the area. Towards the poles, it is cooler. Towards the equator, it is warm.

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13y ago

really hot

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Q: How cold is the prime meridian?
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