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Look on a globe. 49 degrees N Latitude is a circle below the north pole, and above and parallel to the equator. It is a circle, not a point or specific location. To find a point along that circle, you need to know degrees of longitude.
A point on the earth's surface that's 19 degrees north of the equator has a latitude of 19 degrees north. There are an infinite number of points that are all 19 degrees north of the equator. If you mark a little tiny dot on the globe at a few thousand different points that are all 19 degrees north of the equator, they'll start to look like a solid line on the globe. That line is called the "19th parallel" of north latitude.
Meridians are not parallel. They join at the poles. Parallels of latitude is a common phrase. Meridians of longitude look parallel on the the map, but they're not on the globe.
The meridian 20° west of The Greenwich Observatory, London, England. It is a line of longitude that runs from the north pole to the south pole. So you would look along the 20° west line of longitude. You also need a line of latitude. Minutes and seconds is then used to find a precise spot on the earth.
Answer: If you have the Google Earth program, which shows you the world map as a globe that you can zoom in and out from, you can find your exact location in Kenya and draw a straight line from there to the Kaabah in Mecca. I just did it - from a central area of Kenya - and I found that the orientation to Mecca is just about 7 degrees towards the East from straight North. In other words, you look straight to the North and then you turn towards the right by about 7 degrees.
Look by the junk yard in the desert.There is a place for you to prospect. You should find globes in there.
depends on the globe you look at
Look for the biggest piece of land on the map/globe. The right two-thirds of that is Asia.
In the globe, look for Asia first, then look for china, you wont miss it. A little to the left of china is japan then look a little to the lower left of china below japan and you'll find the Philippines.
Look on a globe. 49 degrees N Latitude is a circle below the north pole, and above and parallel to the equator. It is a circle, not a point or specific location. To find a point along that circle, you need to know degrees of longitude.
Longitude refers to the invisible lines across the globe that mark off specific locations. In order to find a line of longitude, it is important to get a map or globe. Look for long lines that are spaced evenly across the globe.
North, 41 degrees.
Aeronautical Engineering should be a sure bet.
Northern . You really should look at a globe or a world map and get some idea of how the world is.
The angle is 45 degrees look on google 3rd site down! The angle is 45 degrees look on google 3rd site down!
A point on the earth's surface that's 19 degrees north of the equator has a latitude of 19 degrees north. There are an infinite number of points that are all 19 degrees north of the equator. If you mark a little tiny dot on the globe at a few thousand different points that are all 19 degrees north of the equator, they'll start to look like a solid line on the globe. That line is called the "19th parallel" of north latitude.
look on a globe to find that answer if you have one or search somewhere else on the internet if you in see the answer that you looking for..