it starts in magical fairy land where the knomes run free and the elfs kill big foot
prime meridian
Yes, if you keep travelling East (or West) you will end up back at your starting point having travelled in a circle. How far you will have travelled will depend where you start. If you start on the Equator you will travel 40,075 kilometres or 24,902 miles. The closer you get to one of the poles the shorter the distance. 10 metres from the pole you would only go 63 meters. You can not do this by travelling North (or South) You get to the pole and then you can't go any further North (or South) so can not complete a circle.
Children typically start developing imaginary friends around the age of 3 to 5 years old.
The Prime Meridian is an imaginary line between the Earth's north and south poles, which, by international agreement, marks zero longitude. The poles are its extremities. Neither pole is its beginning or its end. Its important feature is its location, and the line itself has no direction.
It is called the Equator and the closer you get to it the hotter the countries start becoming.
A circle as such does not have a start point nor an end point. We do however have to start at one point and end at the same point when we draw a perfect circle, but after it is drawn, the actual circle does not have a start nor an end. We might be able to see where we started and ended but this is of no significance to the actual start/end point of the circle as the circle itself does not have any.
To start a circle gimp, begin with finding the center of two pieces of lacing. Then cross the laces and start weaving.
that would be impossible unless to then went west 20kmAnswer:Obviously there are two answers since the surface of the Earth is a sphere:There is one location in the north hemisphere: Starting at the north pole going south then east around the curve of the Earth then north returns you to the poleIn the southern hemisphere there are an infinity of locations: Considering that there is a distance away from the pole that would allow you to circle the pole with 20 km trip (about 3.2 km north of the south pole). A point an additional 20 km further north from this circle (about 23 km total) would allow you to reach the circle by going south 20 km, do the easterly lap of the pole with the second 20 km leg of the trip and return to the starting point with the northerly lap. There are an infinite number of locations due north of the 20 km circumference circle to start from. Similar solutions can develop at the south pole for any distance north of the south pole where traveller could circle the pole any whole multiple number of times with a 20 km eastward journey.
Yes. image and imaginary are two.
The Lena River starts in the Baikal Mountains of Russia, south of the Central Siberian Plateau. It flows into the Arctic Circle, and is the eleventh longest river in the world.
Parallels, also called lines of Latitude, measure the distance (in degrees) either North or south of the equator. 90 Degrees N = North Pole 0 Degrees = Equator 90 Degrees S = South Pole
Parallels (lines of latitude) do not start nor end at the poles; they circle the earth east-to-west like the equator. All of the meridians (lines of longitude) start and stop at the poles.