A globe typically shows the Earth's surface in a spherical form, so it consists of 360 degrees of longitude and 180 degrees of latitude, totaling 64,800 square degrees.
Latitude is measured on a map or globe in degrees, with the equator being 0 degrees and the North and South Poles being 90 degrees north and south, respectively.
The letter "J" on a globe typically represents the Prime Meridian, which is the line of longitude designated as 0 degrees. It serves as the starting point for measuring longitude and divides the Eastern and Western Hemispheres.
(-210) degrees Celsius = -346 degrees Fahrenheit
500 degrees Celsius = 932 degrees Fahrenheit.
179 degrees Celsius = 354.2 degrees Fahrenheit
there are 360 degrees of longatude
89
There are 90 degrees of latitude in each half of the globe.
depends on the globe you look at
Two meridians can be separated by many degrees or by small fractions of a degree.
It it exactly 90°.
In order to travel through all possible latitudes, you'd have to travel all the waybetween the Earth's poles. That's half-way around the globe, or 180 degrees.
There can be infinitely many, but to be specific in number 181. To increase accuracy one can divide it further.
A globe can have 36 meridians drawn at 10-degree intervals. This is because meridians are lines of longitude that extend from the North Pole to the South Pole, and they are measured from 0 degrees (the Prime Meridian) to 360 degrees. Dividing the 360 degrees by 10 degrees gives 36 meridians.
All the way around anything that's measured in angles is typically 360 degrees, and the earth is no exception.
The globe is divided into 360 degrees of longitude and 180 degrees of latitude. Longitude lines run from the North Pole to the South Pole, while latitude lines run parallel to the equator. Together, these divisions help in navigating and identifying locations on Earth.
A globe can have parallels drawn at 10-degree intervals ranging from 0 degrees at the Equator to 90 degrees at the poles. Since there are 180 degrees of latitude (90 degrees north and 90 degrees south), this results in a total of 19 parallels in each hemisphere, plus the Equator, making 39 parallels in total.