Because The lines of Longitude cross over each other at the top of the world which makes them not parallel.
Parallel: Lines that never cross or meet And always stay the same distance apart.
All 'lines' of latitude are parallel to all others.No meridian of longitude is parallel to any others.-- All 'lines' of latitude are parallel to all others.-- No meridian of longitude is parallel to any other one.
Most maps will show latitude and longitude lines, if not, they're ALWAYS on a globe.
Lines of longitude.
All lines of latitude are parallel with the equator.
The 60th parallel South is a line of latitude crossing all lines of longitude.
Parallel lines, by definition, cannot meet. The lines of longitude meet at the Poles.
Vertical lines parallel to the prime meridian are lines of longitude.
Longitude; not parallel
All 'lines' of latitude are parallel to all others.No meridian of longitude is parallel to any others.-- All 'lines' of latitude are parallel to all others.-- No meridian of longitude is parallel to any other one.
Every meridian of longitude is perpendicular to every parallel of latitude, and every parallel of latitude is perpendicular to every meridian of longitude.
Most maps will show latitude and longitude lines, if not, they're ALWAYS on a globe.
lines of latitude
because they merge at the poles... they seem to be parallel near the equtor region..n remenber parallel lines nver meet each other... n due to the shape of our earth these lines merge at poles...
No, perpendicular.
Parallel. Latitude and longitude are perpendicular.
Latitude lines are parallel but not longitude lines.
Lines of longitude.