That's usually false. In most cases, when you cross a time zone boundary from west to east, you advance your clock by an hour.
Subtract the east longitude from 360, and you'll have the west longitude.
The imaginary boundary between the Southern and Northern hemispheres is located at 20 degrees west and 160 degrees east of the Meridians. They are two semi-circular lines that are opposite of each other on the globe, which form an imaginary circle around the earth going through the poles.
no
130° and 140° east longitude pass through Japan.35'n 139'e
The most direct route would be through Missouri. You could cut north to Nebraska and go east through Iowa if you were going from western Kansas to northern Illinois.
East Asia is mostly being ubinized
24 Hours. When you pass the international date line which is the meridian of 180 longitude, you add a day if going west or subtract a day going east.
steal from other country's. or bomb each other
Approximately 7 hours, going west to east.
Subtract the east longitude from 360, and you'll have the west longitude.
No, subtract one hour for each time zone to the West. The sun rises in the East, sets in the West, so it takes longer for the sun to get to the West. The exception would be crossing the International Dateline from East to West.
Going East was created in 1971.
This sounds like some one who is never satisfied. Your on a cruise ship going through the panama canal, who the HELL cares what direction your going, your in panama for god sakes live with it
You willl save 175 hours of driving time via Seattle.
Fiji is the hub of the Pacific, and everything going east from west transits through Fiji.
Flight time (or length) will not be affected by time zones. The time that you arrive will be, however. It still takes a certain number of hours to get to a certain location, and time zones only affect what time it will be when you arrive, not the length of the trip. If you are implying what time it will be when you do arrive, it depends on which direction you are going. If you are going west, subtract an hour per time zone. If you are going east, add an hour per time zone.
The international dateline. Situated at 180 degrees east (or west) through the Pacific ocean with a few kinks to avoid going through countires.