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No, the international date line is a line of longitude, not latitude.
Travelling west the international date line is further west. The answer is no
The International Date line crosses the Arctic and Pacific oceans.
Australia sits to the west of the international date line. If it is Saturday in the US, it is Sunday in Australia.
Alaska, USA is just east of the International Date Line.
Usually on a flat map of the world the international date line is the left and right (west and east) edges of the map, but it is clearly marked on a globe.
It is known as the International Date Line.
The International Date Line zigzags to accommodate national boundaries and avoid dividing countries in half. It appears on both sides of the map because it is not a straight line; it bends to include certain territories within the same date.
No, the international date line is a line of longitude, not latitude.
no countries lies in international date line
the international date line
The International Date Line roughly follows the 180th meridian.
Travelling west the international date line is further west. The answer is no
The International Date Line is the same for all nations.
the international date line sits on the 180 0 line of longitude in the middle of the Pacific Ocean , and is the imaginary line that separates two consecative calendar days
The International Date line crosses the Arctic and Pacific oceans.
Australia sits to the west of the international date line. If it is Saturday in the US, it is Sunday in Australia.