The longest line of latitude is the equator (0°).
No, the equator circles the earth at its widest point
Yes. The intersection of a line of longitude and a line of latitude is a point on the globe, and that point is identified by the longitude and latitude of those lines.
Latitudinal lines run East West along the earth's surface. An easy trick to remember is thinking "lat is flat" therefore the lines are flat when you are looking at a globe or 2D map.Latitude lines can also be called "PARALLELS"
A Latitude/longitude can only be used to give ONE point/position on the planet Earth. The Ring of Fire is a line of volcanoes that circles the Pacific Ocean, it is not a point.
Houses in general look the same all over the world, though in many tropical countries people live in shacks. Air conditioning and no chimneys/fireplaces are commonly found in houses near the equator.
yes the imaginary line is the equator and it circles the globeat its widest point.
the Equator
No, the equator circles the earth at its widest point
Yes. The intersection of a line of longitude and a line of latitude is a point on the globe, and that point is identified by the longitude and latitude of those lines.
If a map or a globe has latitude 'lines' printed on it, they will point east-west.
Latitude and Longitude are used to point to exactly where you want to be
Every point on the equator meets that requirement.
Latitudinal lines run East West along the earth's surface. An easy trick to remember is thinking "lat is flat" therefore the lines are flat when you are looking at a globe or 2D map.Latitude lines can also be called "PARALLELS"
A Latitude/longitude can only be used to give ONE point/position on the planet Earth. The Ring of Fire is a line of volcanoes that circles the Pacific Ocean, it is not a point.
In basic terms...no. A diameter only applies to circles or spheres. The diameter is the distance across the middle at the widest point and the radius is half of the diameter.
Houses in general look the same all over the world, though in many tropical countries people live in shacks. Air conditioning and no chimneys/fireplaces are commonly found in houses near the equator.
The latitude of the north pole is 90° north. (Similarly, the latitude of the south poleis 90° south.)Looking at a globe, you notice that the parallels of latitude are all circles that areparallel to the equator and to each other, and that the closer a parallel is to thenorth or south pole, the smaller it is. Right exactly atthe pole, it's a circle withzero size, which is just a point. So you might say that the pole itself is the 'line'of 90° latitude.