There are more than one major lines of longitude that pass through the Argentine. They have values around 58 degrees west but none of the lines/meridians is a named line.
Any meridian of longitude between about 53.66 and 73.55 degrees west passes through Argentina. There are an infinite number of possibilities in that range.
64th Meridian west
Lines of Longitude are imaginary lines that run from the North Pole to the South Pole. The main line of longitude, the Prime Meridian (zero longitude), passes through the Greenwich Observatory, London, England.
-- Sweden ranges in longitude from 11° to 24.2° East. -- Greece ranges in longitude from 19.4° to 26.6° East. -- Zambia ranges in longitude from 22° to 33.7° East. So, any 'line' of longitude between 22° E and 24.2° E passes through all three of those countries. There are an infinite number of them.
The 120 degrees east line of longitude passes through Asia and Antarctica.
Longitude lines appear "vertical" and latitude lines appear "horizontal." Every single line of longitude passes through the equator. If you meant to say latitude, then the answer is no. Not a single one (they run parallel).
The lines of longitude and the lines of latitude are on the globe if you look! Our expedition will follow a line of longitude.
It passes through the Royal National Observatory in Greenwich, England (UK)
Greenwich England*******************Greenwich is only a district of S.E. London, England. So the answer is London is the city through which zero longitude passes.
The Prime Meridian - in Greenwich, England - is where the starting point for measuring longitude is.
The north-south lines of a grid are called meridians, or lines of longitude. These lines run from the North Pole to the South Pole and help determine a location's east-west position on the Earth's surface.
The Prime Meridian (long) The Equator (lat)