Alaska
It is 59 deg 17 min north so it is south of 60 deg north
60 N 60 E is the Ural Mountains in Russia.
north 44 deg.04.464' West 088 deg 18.981'
Polaris if you're at 40 deg latitude.
There's no point on Earth with those coordinates. Latitude is never greater than 90° north or south.
Never. The Sun can only be directly overhead (90 deg altitude) at latitudes between 23.5 deg N and 23.5 deg S. The Sun is directly overhead at a latitude of 23.5 deg N on the summer solstice. On that day it would be at its highest point in the sky for an observer at 27.947 deg N (about 85.553 deg above S horizon), but it would not be directly overhead.
That's north of Rio de janeiro in Brazil.
its actually Brazil and ski mask
Macau, China: Latitude 22 Deg 12 Minutes North of Equator Longitude 113 Degrees 33 Minutes East of Greenwich Meridian
Yes.
Yes and no, it depends by the definition of "North America". North America spans a range of latitude from Panama (at 7 deg N) to Alert, Nunavut, Canada (at 82 deg N). The part of the North American continent that is located between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn (23.5 degs N and S) will have the sun directly overhead twice each year (such as in Mexico City, at 19 deg N), however on the mainland United States (ranging from 25N to 49N) the sun is never directly overhead.
46 N 96 W is the Sanford Township, Minnesota, USA. Minneapolis is the nearest major city.