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Latitude: 21°15′35.0″NLongitude: 157°48′42.3″W
They are called the 'Tropics', and include all the areas on Earth where the sun can be seen directly above one's head at some point during the year.
In Australia Between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn.
It helped pinpoint their locations so that they knew their destination and would not head in the wrong direction etc.
Probably Lyra or Cygnus
This latitude is called the tropic of Cancer and is located at 23.5 north (the same as the tilt of the earth) the sun is directly over head on June 21.
North of the Tropic of Cancer and south of the tropic of Capricorn so basically any latitude grater than 30 would never have the suns rays directly over your head
You might be anywhere along the Tropic of Cancer, where the latitude is 23.44 degrees north.
The center of the head pin is on the 20th board.
The Earthg's north pole points very close to Polaris in the sky. So Polaris is directly over your head when you stand at the north pole, it's on your horizon when you stand on the equator, and it's somewhere between your horizon and the point directly over your head when you stand somewhere between the north pole and the equator.
Latitude: 21°15′35.0″NLongitude: 157°48′42.3″W
The acromion, which protrude from the scapula, is the body structure directly superior to the head of the humerus.
According to Wikipedia: "The northernmost extremity of the Antarctic mainland (without nearshore islands) is Prime Head, at the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula at 63°12′48″S 57°18′08″W. " Directly then, every latitude line between 63° and 90° South Latitude is covered by the Antarctic continent.
They are called the 'Tropics', and include all the areas on Earth where the sun can be seen directly above one's head at some point during the year.
Polaris is only directly overheat if you are at the north pole.
Celestial coordinates. -- The star's latitude on the celestial sphere is the same as the Earth latitude that it seems to follow on its way aroujnd the sky. On the celestial sphere, the latitude is called "declination", and is expressed in degrees. -- The star's longitude on the celestial sphere is its angle, measured westward, from the point in the sky called the Vernal Equinox ... the point where the sun appears to cross the celestial equator in March. On the celestial sphere, the star's longitude is called "Right Ascension", and it's expressed in hours. That certainly seems confusing, but an "hour of Right Ascension" just means 15 degrees of celestial longitude. So, as the sky turns, the point directly over your head moves through the stars by 1 hour of Right Ascension every hour.
Murray Head was born on March 5, 1946.