Leo lies between Virgo to the east and Cancer to the west.
Depends where you live. Why don't you download Stellarium (it's free from http://www.stellarium.org/) Set your location and you can then search for all night time objects.
he is in space
located on the prime meridian
Any point at 80° north latitude is only about 690 miles from the north Pole.
-- The northernmost point on the coast of Nanumanga is located at . . . 6.2741° south latitude 176.3207° east longitude. -- The northeast end of the runway at Funafuti International Airport is located at . . . 8.5192° south latitude 179.2013° east longitude. -- The southernmost point on the coast of Niuoku is located at . . . 9.4362° south latitude 179.8624° east longitude.
Lines of latitude and longitude allow a specific point to be located any where on the world.
No point on earth can have both a north and a south latitude. (Unless the point is on the equator, in which case its north and south latitude are both zero).
The latitude of every point on the equator is zero.
Every point on Earth has a latitude and a longitude. Together, they tell you exactly where the point is located.
located on the prime meridian
You can find the South Pole at 90 degrees S, a single GPS point.
Any point at 80° north latitude is only about 690 miles from the north Pole.
Every point on the equator is.
There is a point on the equator at everylongitude.All of them have zero latitude.
There is no Tropic of Leo.
Lines of latitude and longitude allow a specific point to be located any where on the world.
-- The northernmost point on the coast of Nanumanga is located at . . . 6.2741° south latitude 176.3207° east longitude. -- The northeast end of the runway at Funafuti International Airport is located at . . . 8.5192° south latitude 179.2013° east longitude. -- The southernmost point on the coast of Niuoku is located at . . . 9.4362° south latitude 179.8624° east longitude.
No point on earth can have both a north and a south latitude. (Unless the point is on the equator, in which case its north and south latitude are both zero).
"90° North latitude" describes a single point on earth. That point is commonly referred to as the "north pole".