1111 Km.
The circumference of the earth is about 40,000 kilometers and the earth has a total of 360 degrees.
If you want to know what 10 degrees is equal to, use a simple proportional equation.
10 X
------ = -------
360 40,000 km
Then, solve for X.... (cross multiply)
(10*40,000)/360= 1111.1111111
At 30 degrees N latitude, you are 30 degrees north of the equator. Each degree of latitude is equivalent to about 69 miles, so at 30 degrees N latitude, you would be approximately 2,070 miles north of the equator.
90 degrees north latitude is the north pole. The equator is zero latitude.
Latitude. 2nd answer: Latitude is the wrong answer. Distance is measured in miles, feet, yards, meters, kilometers, and so forth. Latitude is a measurement of degrees, not distance.
There are 90 degrees latitude from the equator (zero degrees latitude) to the North Pole.
The distance north or south of the equator is measured in degrees of latitude. For example, the equator is measured at 0 degrees; Sydney Australia lies 33.51 degrees south of the equator; Helsinki Finland lies 60 degrees north of the equator.
At 30 degrees N latitude, you are 30 degrees north of the equator. Each degree of latitude is equivalent to about 69 miles, so at 30 degrees N latitude, you would be approximately 2,070 miles north of the equator.
90 degrees north latitude is the north pole. The equator is zero latitude.
Latitude. 2nd answer: Latitude is the wrong answer. Distance is measured in miles, feet, yards, meters, kilometers, and so forth. Latitude is a measurement of degrees, not distance.
1,728 miles
There are 90 degrees latitude from the equator (zero degrees latitude) to the North Pole.
40 degrees. The equator is zero latitude.
The distance north or south of the equator is measured in degrees of latitude. For example, the equator is measured at 0 degrees; Sydney Australia lies 33.51 degrees south of the equator; Helsinki Finland lies 60 degrees north of the equator.
Yes, 45 degrees north is a line of latitude. It is 45 degrees north of the equator and it represents a specific parallel circle on the Earth's surface.
We measure latitude in degrees north or south of the equator. So the equator has a latitude of zero, while the north pole has a latitude of 90 North. Each degree of latitude is 60 nautical miles north or south.
The higher the latitude, the shorter the circle is. -- Equator . . . zero latitude, 24,900 miles long. -- North pole / south pole . . . 90 degrees latitude, zero length.
there is 90 degrees of north latitude.There are 90 degrees of latitude going north from the Equator
No, as you move north (or south) form the equator, they form smaller and smaller circles. -- The length of the zero latitude line (the equator) is about 24,900 miles. -- The length of the 30-degrees latitude line (either north or south) is about 21,500 miles. -- The length of the 60-degrees latitude line (either north or south) is about 12,400 miles. -- The length of the 90-degrees latitude line (north or south pole) is zero.