No. The question confuses elements of multiple definitions.
-- Latitude is a measurement north or south, not east or west.
-- Latitude and longitude "distances" are measured from reference lines, not points.
-- "Pole to pole" is a north-south measurement, not east-west.
-- Longitude, not latitude, is noted in meridians.
We'll try to unravel the confusion with the following twostatements:
-- Latitude is the angle north or south, as measured from the earth's equator.
It is noted by "parallels", drawn parallel to the equator.
-- Longitude is the angle east or west from an agreed zero-line. It is noted by the meridians,
lines drawn pole-to-pole. The zero-line, called the "Prime Meridian", is the one that passes
through Greenwich, a suburb of London.
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.
-- Parallels are associated with latitudes. Meridians are associated with longitudes. -- Parallels are parallel, and no tweo parallels intersect. All meridians intersect all other meridians, at two places. -- Every point on a parallel has the same latitude. Every point on a meridian has the same longitude. -- Every parallel in the same hemisphere has a different length. Every meridian on Earth has the same length. -- Every parallel is a full circle. Every meridian is a semi-circle. -- Every parallel crosses all longitudes. Every meridian crosses all latitudes. -- The distance between two parallels is the same at every longitude. The distance between two meridians depends on the latitude where it's measured. -- To cross all parallels, you only have to travel 12,000 miles. To cross all meridians, you have to travel 24,000 miles.
Imaginary lines that circle the earth from east to west are called lines of longitude, or meridians. These lines help define the distance east or west of the prime meridian, which is located in Greenwich, England.
The distance east or west from a given point on Earth as measured pole to pole is noted by the longitude. Longitude lines run north and south and are measured as angles east or west from the prime meridian, which is located in Greenwich, England.
The distance from the equator is measured in degrees of latitude, with the equator itself defined as 0 degrees latitude. As you move north or south from the equator, the latitude increases up to a maximum of 90 degrees at the North or South Pole.
yes longitude is measured from side to side on earth
Latitude refers to the angular distance of a location north or south of the equator, measured in degrees. Parallels are lines of latitude that run parallel to the equator. Longitude refers to the angular distance of a location east or west of the Prime Meridian, measured in degrees. Meridians are lines of longitude that converge at the poles.
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.
-- Parallels are associated with latitudes. Meridians are associated with longitudes. -- Parallels are parallel, and no tweo parallels intersect. All meridians intersect all other meridians, at two places. -- Every point on a parallel has the same latitude. Every point on a meridian has the same longitude. -- Every parallel in the same hemisphere has a different length. Every meridian on Earth has the same length. -- Every parallel is a full circle. Every meridian is a semi-circle. -- Every parallel crosses all longitudes. Every meridian crosses all latitudes. -- The distance between two parallels is the same at every longitude. The distance between two meridians depends on the latitude where it's measured. -- To cross all parallels, you only have to travel 12,000 miles. To cross all meridians, you have to travel 24,000 miles.
Imaginary lines that circle the earth from east to west are called lines of longitude, or meridians. These lines help define the distance east or west of the prime meridian, which is located in Greenwich, England.
Latitude, parallels
The distance east or west from a given point on Earth as measured pole to pole is noted by the longitude. Longitude lines run north and south and are measured as angles east or west from the prime meridian, which is located in Greenwich, England.
The distance from the equator is measured in degrees of latitude, with the equator itself defined as 0 degrees latitude. As you move north or south from the equator, the latitude increases up to a maximum of 90 degrees at the North or South Pole.
Parallels (latitude) are measured in degrees north or south of the equator, with 0 degrees being the equator. Meridians (longitude) are measured in degrees east or west of the Prime Meridian, with 0 degrees being the Prime Meridian which runs through Greenwich, England. Longitude and latitude are used to define specific locations on Earth's surface.
A "parallel" is a line comprised of all the points on Earth with the same latitude ... the angle measured north or south of the equator. Each parallel is a full circle, that crosses all meridians. A "meridian" is a line comprised of all the points on Earth with the same longitude ... the angle measured east or west from the Prime Meridian. Each meridian is a half- circle, that crosses all parallels.
It is "A distance north or south of the equator, measured in degrees".But distance is not measured in degrees. The latitude of a place is theangle corresponding to the shortest arc on the Earth's surface betweenthe equator and that place.
Parallels Parallels are circles that are parallel to the equator. They are measured in degrees north or south of the equator, with 0° latitude being the equator itself. The distance between two adjacent parallels decreases as you move towards the poles. The equator is the longest parallel, while the poles are the shortest. Parallels are used to determine latitude, which is the measure of how far north or south a location is from the equator. Meridians Meridians are semi-circles that run from the North Pole to the South Pole. They are measured in degrees east or west of the Prime Meridian, which is the meridian that passes through Greenwich, England. The distance between two adjacent meridians is the same everywhere on Earth. The Prime Meridian is the longest meridian, while the 180° meridian is the shortest. Meridians are used to determine longitude, which is the measure of how far east or west a location is from the Prime Meridian.