Longitude, longitudinal
As opposed to latitude (horizontal lines circling the earth.
These imaginary lines are called lines of latitude.
Lines of Longitude, also known as meridians.
That's a meridian of longitude.
meridians of longitude
Yes. Any two lines of constant latitude that you choose stay the same distance apart everywhere and never meet or cross. That's a big part of the reason that they're often called "parallels" of latitude.
The south pole
Yes, every line of longitude runs from the North Pole to the South Pole.
If you mean the longitude lines, as seen on a globe, they meet at the North Pole and at the South Pole.
All the lines of longitude meet or converge at the North Pole - they meet at the South Pole too!
Yes. Any two lines of constant latitude that you choose stay the same distance apart everywhere and never meet or cross. That's a big part of the reason that they're often called "parallels" of latitude.
The south pole
longtitude
lines that run from the north pole to the south pole!
Yes, every line of longitude runs from the North Pole to the South Pole.
North-south, pole to pole
longitude
longitude
longitude
If you mean the longitude lines, as seen on a globe, they meet at the North Pole and at the South Pole.
magnetic north north pole =magnetic south
longitudinal lines run north/south; Latitudinal lines run east/west