South America
lol 2’
N America
Bob
The meridian of 15° East longitude crosses territory on the continent of Europe, Africa, and Antarctica.
There are several ways in which you can determine your latitude. 1. Use a GPS unit. It will read out your latitude, longitude and precise time. 2. Look on a map; most navigational and topographic maps are scaled in latitude and longitude. 3. Radio navigation beacons like LORAN or R_NAV can give you your latitude. 4. At night, and in the northern hemisphere north of about 15N, you can (weather permitting) take a celestial observation of the north star Polaris, and the sextant reading is, with a half-degree or so, your latitude.
Well, a pair of coordinates defines a single point, so you'd never talk about the "latitude and longitude" of a whole continent. But we see what you're getting at. The Prime Meridian and the Equator both cross Africa, so there is African territory in the northern, southern, eastern and western Hemispheres, and there are points in Africa with every possible permutation of coordinate directions: -- North lat / East lon -- North lat / West lon -- South lat / East lon -- South lat / West lon. Africa is the only continent for which this is true.
That point is in the Pacific Ocean, in the territorial waters of the Northern Mariana Islands.
Bob
-5 -15n = 10add 5 to both sides-15n = 15divide both sides by -15n = -1
The meridian of 15° East longitude crosses territory on the continent of Europe, Africa, and Antarctica.
According to Google Maps, 15N 60E is in the Arabian Sea
14
You could do so many. Here are some examples: 15n=105 15n+105=1005 15n-105=270 Hope this is what you were looking for. :) Good luck!
There are several ways in which you can determine your latitude. 1. Use a GPS unit. It will read out your latitude, longitude and precise time. 2. Look on a map; most navigational and topographic maps are scaled in latitude and longitude. 3. Radio navigation beacons like LORAN or R_NAV can give you your latitude. 4. At night, and in the northern hemisphere north of about 15N, you can (weather permitting) take a celestial observation of the north star Polaris, and the sextant reading is, with a half-degree or so, your latitude.
To figure out what N stands for 15n, 10 and 190 needs to be used in an equation. If the equation was 15n-10=190, you would start by adding 10 to both sides to give you 15n=200. The next step would be to divide both sides by 15 which gives you n=13.33.
Well, a pair of coordinates defines a single point, so you'd never talk about the "latitude and longitude" of a whole continent. But we see what you're getting at. The Prime Meridian and the Equator both cross Africa, so there is African territory in the northern, southern, eastern and western Hemispheres, and there are points in Africa with every possible permutation of coordinate directions: -- North lat / East lon -- North lat / West lon -- South lat / East lon -- South lat / West lon. Africa is the only continent for which this is true.
hawaii
The magnitude of the resultant can be anything between 5N and 15N.
That point is in the Pacific Ocean, in the territorial waters of the Northern Mariana Islands.