They don't. Lines of longitude come together at the North and south Poles.
All of the meridians of longitude converge (come together) at the north and south poles.
Lines of latitude are all parallel to each other, so do not converge. Lines of longitude do converge, at the north and the south poles.
Lines of constant latitude are parallel. No two of them meet anywhere.All lines of constant latitude cross all lines of constant longitude.
The lines that run north to south come together at the North and South Poles. The North Pole is located at 90 degrees north latitude, while the South Pole is located at 90 degrees south latitude. These points represent the earth's axis of rotation.
All longitudes converge at the north and south poles. To look at it another way,the north pole is located at 90 degrees north latitude and every longitude.
They are lines of constant latitude, all parallel to the equator.
All lines of latitude start from the 0 degree latitude line, known as the equator.
All 'lines' of latitude are parallel to all others.No meridian of longitude is parallel to any others.-- All 'lines' of latitude are parallel to all others.-- No meridian of longitude is parallel to any other one.
No. All of them do but two. The latitude lines at 90 degrees North and South actually coincide with the intersection of all longitudinal lines. So technically, because they coincide, they do not form any angle.
All the lines of longitude.
It is parellels
yes they are