Turkey spans nearly 18.5 degrees of longitude, between about 26°24' east at Canakkale
to 44°46' east at the point where Turkey, Iran, and Iraq meet. On your map, you're welcome to
subdivide that span into as many or as few intervals as you're comfortable with, and to draw
the lines to indicate the various meridians. Keep in mind that a greater number of lines permits
more precise estimates of longitude, but they do tend to cover up stuff on the map. But the choice
is entirely up to the owner of the map.
All of them between 24.697° and 35.610° east longitude
Iran is a big place. Every longitude between 44 degrees east and 63 degrees east passes through Iranian territory.
Any meridian you decide to draw between about 60.47° and 74.86° east longitude does.
All of them between roughly 60.5 and 74.9 degrees east.
140 degrees east
All lines of longitude pass through the Equator.
All lines of longitude pass through the Equator.
64th Meridian west
12, 13, 14
All lines of longitude meet at the poles; none pass through. No lines of latitude connect at or pass through either pole.
The Equator is a longitude line. Latitude lines pass through the equator.
All lines of longitude pass through the Equator.
All the lines of longitude.
longitude and latitude
All lines of longitude pass through the Equator.
64th Meridian west
12, 13, 14
All lines of longitude meet at the poles; none pass through. No lines of latitude connect at or pass through either pole.
All lines of longitude are measured from the Prime, or Greenwich, meridian.
yes it does because on a map there are longitude and latitude lines all over the place so YES!
It's not located on any paticular line. All longitude lines pass through it.
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.