The equator is the starting line for measuring lines of latitude
The Equator.
The lines of latitude tell the angle between a place and the Equator - the imaginary line which runs east/west around the globe - at right angles to the line connecting the north and south poles. All lines of latitude are parallel to the Equator, and so they also run east/west or west/east. An easy way to remember the difference between latitude and longitude is longitude has the word long in it. they go north and south or you may say up and down and seem longer than the latitude lines which go left and right or east and west. i dont think the lines actually are longer but they appear to be. so think of it as longitude longer up and down. latitude the opposite, shorter, left and right. The lines of latitude on maps and globes 'run' in the same direction that the marks on a ruler do.
The latitude and longitude of a place are known as its co-ordinates.
The latitude of a place is the angle corresponding to the shortest arc on the Earth's surface between the equator and that place.
Latitude measures how close or far from the equator a place is. A place further from the equator is usually colder, and a place nearer is warmer.
The latitude of Tampa is 27.947N. The longitude is -82.458W. It is in the Eastern Standard time zone.The latitude of Florida varies between, that of some place in the south and the latitude of some place in the north of the state.
equator
The starting line for measuring latitude is what
The latitude of a place is the angle from the Earth's equator north or south to that place.
Globes is one of tools for education, such as geography for knowing place of every country. It can made from balloon or anything and can be purchased at book store.
The latitude and longitude of a place are known as its co-ordinates.
The lines of latitude tell the angle between a place and the Equator - the imaginary line which runs east/west around the globe - at right angles to the line connecting the north and south poles. All lines of latitude are parallel to the Equator, and so they also run east/west or west/east. An easy way to remember the difference between latitude and longitude is longitude has the word long in it. they go north and south or you may say up and down and seem longer than the latitude lines which go left and right or east and west. i dont think the lines actually are longer but they appear to be. so think of it as longitude longer up and down. latitude the opposite, shorter, left and right. The lines of latitude on maps and globes 'run' in the same direction that the marks on a ruler do.
Latitude of a place is the measure of how far north or south it is from the equator. Longitude of a place is the measure of how far east or west it is from a line on the earth that's accepted as the starting line. With those two numbers, you can describe the location of every point on earth.
The latitude of the north end of Runway-20 at Christchurch International Airport is 43.47501° South, and the latitude of the opposite end of the same runway is 43.49756° South. The latitude of the center of the intersection of Northcote Rd, Queen Elizabeth II Dr, Cranford St, and Main North Rd, at St. Bede's College, is 43.48459°, and the latitude of the Burger King on Colombo St near Cathedral Square is 43.53243° South. The 'lines' that you often see on maps and globes have NO official status. Different maps and globes have different numbers of lines, and some have none at all. You would not ask "Which mark on the ruler is closest to your height ?". You would ask "How tall are you ?". Similarly, if you want to know the latitude of a place, it makes no difference how near or far from that place some map printer decided to print a line.
The latitude and longitude of a place are known as its co-ordinates.
these are the imaginary lines to check the gmt and location of a place
The latitude of a place is the angle corresponding to the shortest arc on the Earth's surface between the equator and that place.
Latitude is a coordinate denoting a place on Earth's surface; books and flowers do not have latitude.