which capital has the coordinates of 50n latitude,98w longitude
None of them. That point is off the coast of Tasmania.
Asia. These coordinates are in Mongolia, about 10 miles north of the Chinese border.
You have forgotten to include the degrees of latitude and longitude. For instance, the coordinates of London, England is 51.5074° N, 0.1278° W. In your question, you have two latitudes and no degrees.
victoria
None of them.
North America
which capital has the coordinates of 50n latitude,98w longitude
None of them. That point is off the coast of Tasmania.
Asia. These coordinates are in Mongolia, about 10 miles north of the Chinese border.
You have forgotten to include the degrees of latitude and longitude. For instance, the coordinates of London, England is 51.5074° N, 0.1278° W. In your question, you have two latitudes and no degrees.
victoria
The 43rd parallel cuts through Tasmania, not mainland Australia.
The exact location of a place must include both a latitude and a longitude. The latitude and longitude can be point-point a location on the planet as precise as a postage stamp with 7 decimal places or an area as large as ~100 square km with whole decimal degrees.
the andswer is north america.
Without specific coordinates, it is not possible to determine the exact body of water that lies at a certain latitude and longitude. However, some possible bodies of water that lie at around 0 degrees north latitude and 0 degrees west longitude include the Gulf of Guinea, the Atlantic Ocean, and the Gulf of Mexico.
Latitude and longitude are angles, so any unit in which angles are measured is a perfectly good unit to describe latitude and longitude. Units of angular measure include radians, grads, degrees, and others. Geographic coordinates are most often, indeed almost universally, expressed in degrees. Also, since a degree of latitude or longitude is quite a significant distance on the Earth's surface, it's necessary to be able to indicate fractions of a degree ... most often done as a decimal part, or with the clunky "minutes/seconds" subdivisions.