Every possible line that you can imagine that connects the north pole and the
south pole is a "meridian" of longitude. It's over 12,000 miles long, and every
point on it has the same longitude.
Every possible line that you can imagine that goes straight east and west, all the way
around the Earth, is a "parallel" of latitude. Its length depends on how close it is to
one of the poles, and every point on it has the same latitude.
They are drawn on the earth as imaginary lines that run from east to west.
On maps and globes.
they are drawn from east to west
The label that is put on lines of latitude that lie north of the equator are labeled with N. This stands for north.
Because all of Australia is south of the equator and less than 180° east of the Prime Meridian.
Lines of latitude . . .-- are imaginary-- are invisible-- are invented by humans.-- They are all parallel to each other.-- Each line is composed of every point on Earth that has the same latitude.-- Each line goes completely around the Earth.-- The lines are labeled according to the latitude that each represents. The linethat represents zero latitude is the equator.-- Since the Earth's surface is spherical, latitude is an angle. It ranges from zero atthe equator to 90 degrees at the north and south poles.-- The length of any line of latitude depends on which latitude it represents, being approximately(40,075 kilometers / 24,900 miles) times (cosine of the latitude) .-- There is no set number of 'lines'. Different maps and globes display differentnumbers of lines. But a line can be made from any latitude that can be named,and there are an infinite number of those.
They're not. If 'S' and 'E' are the only labels you see, then you're only looking at 1/4 of the earth, or less. For every south latitude, there's also a north latitude with the same number, and for every east longitude, there's also a west longitude with the same number. You should turn your globe, or turn to another page in your book of maps. A whole new 3/4 of a world awaits you.
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The label that is put on lines of latitude that lie north of the equator are labeled with N. This stands for north.
Any latitude markers that are printed on any map or globe and are between the equator and the south pole must be labeled as "South" latitudes.
Because all of Australia is south of the equator and less than 180° east of the Prime Meridian.
That would be the parallel labeled "66.5° North" on maps or globes where 0.5° lines are printed. It's also the approximate latitude of the Arctic Circle.
Each 'parallel' of latitude is comprised of an infinite number of dots. They're located at all the places on Earth that have the same latitude, and the line is labeled with that latitude. So, when you're looking at a map or a globe and trying to figure out the latitude of a place, the line shows where one particular latitude is, and that helps you estimate the latitude of the spot you're interested in. The lines themselves don't measure anything.
There is no such mark The line of latitude labeled 0° is called the Equator, and forms the boundary between the northern and southern Hemispheres. The line of longitude labeled 0° is called the Prime Meridian. It's one of the two lines that separate the eastern and western Hemispheres.
The lines that intercept latitude lines are lines of longitude.
Lines of latitude . . .-- are imaginary-- are invisible-- are invented by humans.-- They are all parallel to each other.-- Each line is composed of every point on Earth that has the same latitude.-- Each line goes completely around the Earth.-- The lines are labeled according to the latitude that each represents. The linethat represents zero latitude is the equator.-- Since the Earth's surface is spherical, latitude is an angle. It ranges from zero atthe equator to 90 degrees at the north and south poles.-- The length of any line of latitude depends on which latitude it represents, being approximately(40,075 kilometers / 24,900 miles) times (cosine of the latitude) .-- There is no set number of 'lines'. Different maps and globes display differentnumbers of lines. But a line can be made from any latitude that can be named,and there are an infinite number of those.
Lines of latitude run parallel to the Equator (which is zero latitude).
latitude?
whats the principal lines of latitude
lines of latitude