my mouth
The 60 degrees east line of longitude runs through the Ural Mountains.
They are lines of longitude, not latitude, but 60° East longitude is approximately correct for the 1600-mile long range.
Longitude is measured in degrees east or west of the Prime Meridian, which is the starting point for the Earth's longitudinal coordinate system. Longitude lines run north-south and indicate positions to the east or west of the Prime Meridian, which passes through Greenwich, England.
Lines of longitude tells us where we are in relation to the Prime Meridian, either to the west or east.For an exact position on Earth, both lines of latitude and longitude (in degrees plus minutes and seconds) are used.
They are called the lines of longitude. Lines of longitude range from 0 degrees on the prime meridian to 180 degrees.
The 60 degrees east line of longitude runs through the Ural Mountains.
Any meridian of longitude between about 53.66 and 73.55 degrees west passes through Argentina. There are an infinite number of possibilities in that range.
110 degrees W through 80 degrees W
Longitude lines measure how far (in degrees) you are East or West of the Prime Meridian (which is a longitude line that runs through Greenwich, England and is designated as 0° longitude).
There are more than one major lines of longitude that pass through the Argentine. They have values around 58 degrees west but none of the lines/meridians is a named line.
The highest longitude lines are the prime meridian at 0 degrees longitude and the 180 degrees longitude line. These lines mark the starting point for longitude measurements to the east and west, respectively.
Longitude lines appear "vertical" and latitude lines appear "horizontal." Every single line of longitude passes through the equator. If you meant to say latitude, then the answer is no. Not a single one (they run parallel).
The answer is equator
It locates a place through degrees
30 deg. north and 20 deg. North
There are 180 degrees of east longitude and 180 degrees of west longitude, for a grand total of 360 degrees of longitude around the Earth. You're free to draw as few or as many 'lines' through that range on your map or globe as you feel will make you comfortable. There is no standard set of 'lines' that everone is required to use.
They are lines of longitude, not latitude, but 60° East longitude is approximately correct for the 1600-mile long range.