The question is ambiguous. When specifying a longitude, the parameter "east" or "west"
must also be stated. Every place in the Western Hemisphere has a west longitude. Every
place in the eastern hemisphere has an east longitude. Numbers in both hemispheres range
from zero to 180 degrees.
The meridian of 90 degrees east longitude passes through
-- Russian Federation
-- Mongolia
-- China
-- Bhutan
-- India
-- Bangla Desh
-- Antarctica.
The meridian of 90 degrees west longitude passes through
-- Canada
-- USA
-- Mexico
-- Guatemala
-- San Salvador
-- Galapagos Islands (Ecuador)
-- Antarctica.
-- Greenland
-- Canada
-- Venezuela
-- Guyana
-- Brazil
-- Bolivia
-- Paraguay
-- Argentina
-- Uruguay
-- (Antarctica -- a continent without countries)
Longitude always needs "east" or "west" with it. Without that tag, the line that
you're describing could be in either one of two places.
-- The meridian of 60 degrees east longitude is a line between the north and
south pole that passes through the Arctic Ocean, Novaya Zemlya, the Kara Sea,
Russia, Kazakhstan, the Aral Sea, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Iran, the Gulf of
Oman, the Arabian Sea, the Indian ocean, and Antarctica.
-- The meridian of 60 degrees west longitude is a line between the north and
south pole that passes through the Arctic Ocean, Greenland, Baffin Bay, the
Davis Strait, Canada, the Gulf of St. Lawrence, the Atlantic Ocean, Venezuela,
Guyana, Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay, Argentina, the Falkland Islands, the South
Shetland Islands, and Antarctica.
-- Greenland
-- Canada
-- Barbados
-- Venezuela
-- Guyana
-- Brazil
-- Bolivia
-- Paraguay
-- Argentina
-- Falkland Islands (Malvinas)
-- Antarctica
all have territory at 60 degrees west longitude.
everything but Sweden
All of the other meridians; the lines of longitude.
Hawaii and Alaska
No longitude between 0° - 67° West or 0° - 172° East touches any part of US territory.
Not quite. Lines of latitude are called parallels, and they never touch each other. The meridians are lines of longitude, and all of them converge at the poles.
The 60th meridian west traverses the following: Greenland Canada Barbados (territorial waters) Guyana Brazil Paraguay Argentina Falkland Islands Antarctica
The Prime Meridian (zero degrees longitude) crosses England, France, and Spain.
The continents that touch the 60 degrees west line of longitude are South America and North America.
Greenland, Canada, Venezuela, Guyana, Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay, Argentina, Falkland Islands, South Shetland Islands
All of the other meridians; the lines of longitude.
Every parallel of latitude crosses every meridian of longitude.
The lines of longitude measure degrees east and west of the prime meridian, but they don't directly measure distance. The lines of longitude all converge at both poles, and are farthest apart from one another at the equator. This is unlike the lines of latitude no two of which ever touch because they are circles that are parallel to one another with their centers located on the earth's axis. You can calculate distance between degrees of longitude, but you need to know the degrees latitude in order to do that.
Hawaii and Alaska
I think all but i know that all countries can get the ipod touch from apple.com
Some European countries touch the sea and some are landlocked.
No longitude between 0° - 67° West or 0° - 172° East touches any part of US territory.
Not quite. Lines of latitude are called parallels, and they never touch each other. The meridians are lines of longitude, and all of them converge at the poles.
the answer is Latvia