-- Arctic Circle. . . . . . . . 66.5 north
-- Tropic of Cancer . . . . 23.5 north
-- Equator. . . . . . . . . . . Zero
-- Tropic of Capricorn . . 23.5 south
-- Antarctic Circle . . . . . 66.5 south
-- The latitude of your home.
The South Pole is at 90 degrees S latitude. The North Pole is at 90 degrees N latitude. All lines of longitude converge at both poles.
The north and south poles are at 90° latitude, and ALL longitudes meet there so longitude at the poles is irrelevant. Honestly, it's much easier to discuss these things if you forget about "lines".
No. All of them do but two. The latitude lines at 90 degrees North and South actually coincide with the intersection of all longitudinal lines. So technically, because they coincide, they do not form any angle.
It is latitude lines. this is all from my geography class. hehehe
0 degress latitude is the Equator and 0 degress longitude is the Greenwich Meridian.
It must, by definition, cover all lines of Longitude. In terms of Latitude it is further north than, say, 60 degrees.
The South Pole is at 90 degrees S latitude. The North Pole is at 90 degrees N latitude. All lines of longitude converge at both poles.
Both poles are noted as 90 degrees. At the poles, all lines of longitude meet. You could say that the poles, then, are indicated as 90 degrees of latitude, but since there is no longitude, latitude can be assumed.
The north and south poles are at 90° latitude, and ALL longitudes meet there so longitude at the poles is irrelevant. Honestly, it's much easier to discuss these things if you forget about "lines".
No. All of them do but two. The latitude lines at 90 degrees North and South actually coincide with the intersection of all longitudinal lines. So technically, because they coincide, they do not form any angle.
It is latitude lines. this is all from my geography class. hehehe
0 degress latitude is the Equator and 0 degress longitude is the Greenwich Meridian.
The South Pole is at 90 degrees S latitude. The North Pole is at 90 degrees N latitude. All lines of longitude converge at both poles.
All 'lines' of latitude are parallel to all others.No meridian of longitude is parallel to any others.-- All 'lines' of latitude are parallel to all others.-- No meridian of longitude is parallel to any other one.
Longitude lines appear "vertical" and latitude lines appear "horizontal." Every single line of longitude passes through the equator. If you meant to say latitude, then the answer is no. Not a single one (they run parallel).
All lines of longitude are equal. The longest line of latitude is the Equator.
All of the meridians of longitude converge (come together) at the north and south poles.