There's no city there. That point is in the water, roughly midway
between the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico.
There's no city there. That point is out in the big middle of the Pacific Ocean, about 2,100 miles southwest of Honolulu.
No such point can exist, because no point on Earth can have both an eastand a west coordinate.(Except for the north and south poles, where ALLlongitudes converge.)
The ocean found at 20 degrees north latitude and 180 degrees west longitude is the Pacific Ocean.
That's hard to say, since the largest possible longitude, east or west, is 180 degrees.
There is no such location because the maximum degree of latitude is 90 degrees.
There's no city there. That point is out in the big middle of the Pacific Ocean, about 2,100 miles southwest of Honolulu.
No such point can exist, because no point on Earth can have both an eastand a west coordinate.(Except for the north and south poles, where ALLlongitudes converge.)
360 total, 180 degrees west of prime meridian, and 180 degrees east. There are 180 degrees of latitude, 90 degrees north of the equator, and 90 degrees south.
The ocean found at 20 degrees north latitude and 180 degrees west longitude is the Pacific Ocean.
That's hard to say, since the largest possible longitude, east or west, is 180 degrees.
North is 0 degrees, east is 90 degrees, south is 180 degrees, and west is 270 degrees.
There is no such location because the maximum degree of latitude is 90 degrees.
The longitude range is from -180 to 180 degrees, while the latitude range is from -90 to 90 degrees. Longitude measures the position east or west of the Prime Meridian (0 degrees), while latitude measures the position north or south of the Equator (0 degrees).
The largest latitude is +90 degrees (North Pole) and -90 degrees (South Pole). The largest longitude is +180 degrees (international date line) and -180 degrees (same meridian on the other side of the globe).
180
That point is one of the many in north-central Morocco, about 180 miles east-northeast of Marrakech.
The degrees are 180 degrees north and all degrees west, it goes across the whole world.