0 degrees north is the north pole and zero degrees south is the south pole.
The location of the poles. 0 degrees North is the South Pole. 0 degrees South is the North Pole.
The Equator is termed 0 degrees. 90 degrees south is the South Pole, 90 degrees north is the North Pole.
No. The equator is both 0 degrees north and 0 degrees south.
There is no such thing as "north of 270 degrees". Latitudes (north or south) go from 0 to 90 degrees.
It would be the Tropic of Cancer and The Tropic of Capricorn if it was 25 degrees north and south latitude.
The location of the poles. 0 degrees North is the South Pole. 0 degrees South is the North Pole.
The Equator is termed 0 degrees. 90 degrees south is the South Pole, 90 degrees north is the North Pole.
The Equator is termed 0 degrees. 90 degrees south is the South Pole, 90 degrees north is the North Pole.
No. The equator is both 0 degrees north and 0 degrees south.
equator
There is no such thing as "north of 270 degrees". Latitudes (north or south) go from 0 to 90 degrees.
It would be the Tropic of Cancer and The Tropic of Capricorn if it was 25 degrees north and south latitude.
The Equator is the line of 0 degrees latitude. The latitudes of the North Pole is 90 degrees north, and the South Pole is 90 degrees south.
Latitude is measured in degrees North and South from the North to South poles. Longitude is measured in degrees East and West starting with 0 at Greenwich, England.
That's impossible - the MAXIMUM latitute north or south is 90 degrees !
The highest possible latitude number, whether north or south, is 90 degrees. 90 degrees north latitude defines the north pole. 90 degrees south latitude defines the south pole. There can't be a north latitude of 94-6-27, or a south latitude of 180-0-0. Furthermore, even if both numbers in the question were legitimate latitudes, it's not possible for a point to have both a north and a south coordinate. The question strikes out in every regard.
France. 0 degrees (east) is the Greenwich meridian which runs from the North Pole, through London, to the South pole. 45 degrees north is hlafway between the equator and the North Pole.