it depends on what your trying to get.
5 or 6 lines of longitude
"Lines of longitude" are conceptual, not physical; there can be as many as we want. For example, there are 3600 "seconds of longitude" between each degree of longitude. That's 60 minutes of arc per degree, and 60 seconds of arc per minute.
lines of longitude are lines drawn north and south and measure east and west a famous line of longitude is the Prime meridian
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.
Lines of Longitude are imaginary lines that run from the North Pole to the South Pole. The main line of longitude, the Prime Meridian (zero longitude), passes through the Greenwich Observatory, London, England.
5 or 6 lines of longitude
360 lines i think... There are 12 lines of East longitude. 360 is WAY off.
Two of them.
67583
meridians or lines of longitude
Florida does have Longitude and Latitude lines, and while they are documented on maps of this area and in many other ways the measurements were done many many years ago.
"Lines" of constant longitude are "meridians".
Lines of longitude, or meridians.
"Lines of longitude" are conceptual, not physical; there can be as many as we want. For example, there are 3600 "seconds of longitude" between each degree of longitude. That's 60 minutes of arc per degree, and 60 seconds of arc per minute.
Parallel lines, by definition, cannot meet. The lines of longitude meet at the Poles.
The northern and southern hemispheres each have 360 degrees of longitude. The eastern and western hemispheres each have 180 degrees of longitude. You can use as many or as few 'lines' as you want, to mark off any number of degrees.
Vertical lines parallel to the prime meridian are lines of longitude.