its will always have both lines on a map or globe.
The same as the number of different lengths on a 3-foot ruler. Or, for that matter, on a 1-foot ruler. The number is infinite. If you name two latitudes, then I can always name another one that's between yours, no matter how close together yours are. Don't be fooled by the latitude 'lines' that you see on some maps and globes. That's certainly not the only latitudes there are, any more than the marks on a ruler are the only possible lengths.
The northernmost latitude is 90 degrees north. Only one point is there ... the north pole.
Honolulu, Hawaii is the only state capital in the US that is west of 150 degrees W longitude.
Globes were invented to give a more accurate depiction of the world. Previously, all there were maps, which not only distorted the size and shape of landmasses and oceans but also helped perpetuate the false assumption that the world was flat.
Austin is the capital city in the U.S. state of Texas, a state that borders the Gulf of Mexico. The 100 degrees west longitude line pass through Texas.
No , Lines of Latitude and Longitude are not rays because they do not go on infinitely (forever). They are only imaginary lines that exist on Earth.
Lines of latitude and longitude are only shown only maps so as to help people navigate and pinpoint places on Earth with more accuracy.
The north and south poles are at 90° latitude, and ALL longitudes meet there so longitude at the poles is irrelevant. Honestly, it's much easier to discuss these things if you forget about "lines".
Such points have no significance, mainly because there are no 'lines'. Every pointon earth is a point where a latitude and a longitude intersect.Some maps and globes print some 'lines', and some don't. Those that do may print'lines' every 30
The North and South Poles.
The lines are never measured. They're only markers. Latitude and longitude are angles, that describe the locations of points on the surface of a sphere. They're expressed in units of angle measure, typically in decimal degrees, or degrees, minutes, and seconds.
Latitude, with an A, goes across the map.Longitude, with an O, goes over the Poles.
Location. They are intersections like a street corner, only on a global scale.
The lines are never measured. They're only markers. Latitude and longitude are angles, that describe the locations of points on the surface of a sphere. They're expressed in units of angle measure, typically in decimal degrees, or degrees, minutes, and seconds.
Every point on Earth has a longitude and a latitude. The only exceptions arethe north and south poles. Each of them has a latitude and every longitude.
Lines of latitude and longitude are most important in determining state borders in the western region of the US, where states are often more geometrically shaped and boundaries are defined by specific lines of latitude and longitude.
All lines of latitude and longitude are imaginary; there are no parallels or meridians printed on the Earth. Only three latitude lines have any physical significance; the equator, the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn. Everything else is dependent on our systems of measurement.