Since the latitude at the southernmost point of Trinidad is roughly 10.04169° North
depending on the tide, any 'line' you want to draw at any latitude south of that one
is south of Trinidad.
The southernmost point of Trinidad, about 3.7 miles southwest of Fullarton, appears to be at latitude 10.0424° North. Any parallel of latitude less than that passes south of Trinidad. You may be referring to the parallel of 10° north, only because the globe or map you're looking at decided to print a line there. But there's no standard set of 'lines'. You would never ask "What mark on the ruler is just below your height ?" Different rulers print different numbers of marks, and use different spacings between their marks. Just like different maps and globes do.
250N Latitude passes just south of Brownsville TX in Mexico,) and through south Florida slightly north of Key West.
The Equator is at 0 degrees latitude. The South Pole is at the centre of the Southern Hemisphere. The South Pole is at 90 degrees S latitude. Every line of latitude between 0 and 90 S are in the Southern Hemisphere.
"31.68 N latitude" describes a circle all the way around the world about 2200 miles north of the equator. It passes through the southern United States (Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas) and northern Mexico. It passes through the southern tip of Japan, across China just north of Shanghai, across Tibet and Nepal and Pakistan, right through Lahore. It also crosses Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Israel just south of Jerusalem, crosses the Mediterranean and North Africa, and leaves Africa just south of Casablanca.
It is an imaginary line just south of the Tropic Of Cancer. The line 22.5oN passes through Mexico and Cuba in the Western Hemisphere; passes through the Sahara Desert region of Africa; passes very near Calcutta in India, near Hong Kong in China, and near Hawaii in the Pacific Ocean.
The southernmost point of Trinidad, about 3.7 miles southwest of Fullarton, appears to be at latitude 10.0424° North. Any parallel of latitude less than that passes south of Trinidad. You may be referring to the parallel of 10° north, only because the globe or map you're looking at decided to print a line there. But there's no standard set of 'lines'. You would never ask "What mark on the ruler is just below your height ?" Different rulers print different numbers of marks, and use different spacings between their marks. Just like different maps and globes do.
250N Latitude passes just south of Brownsville TX in Mexico,) and through south Florida slightly north of Key West.
Indiana extends from (just south of) 38 degrees north to (just south of) 42 degrees north. The full degree latitude closest to the midpoint is 40 degrees north.
it just passes last year
The 10S parallel of latitude passes through Africa and South America. It just misses the northern tip of Australia.
The Arctic Circle.
The Arctic Circle.
Probably Definately: It's just south of 60 latitude.
That latitude has no special designation that we're aware of. It's just the "45th parallel" south.
That latitude has no special designation that we're aware of. It's just the "45th parallel" south.
I don't know how to show a map on here, of Trinidad or any place else for that matter. Can you put maps on this page? Look for Trinidad just north of South America.
The latitude at the north pole is 90° North. The latitude at the south pole is 90° south. So the trip from one pole to the other covers 180° of latitude ... just what you would expect when you travel halfway around any sphere.