That point is located in the Gulf of Guinea off the west coast of Africa.
The greatest possible number of degrees of latitude is 90. Latitude is measured from the equator toward the North Pole or toward the South Pole. The equator is zero degrees of latitude. The North Pole is 90 degrees N, and the South Pole is 90 degrees S.
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).
No. The farther north you go, the greater your north latitude becomes. As you can see, the 16 minutes is greater than the 4 minutes, so the first latitude in the question is farther north than the second one.
The north pole is 90 degrees north latitude. The south pole is 90 degrees south latitude. When you travel from one pole to the other, you go through 180 degrees of latitude. Which isn't so surprising, since that trip takes you halfway around the world.
Latitude is a geographic coordinate that specifies the north-south position of a point on the Earth's surface. It is measured in degrees, with the equator at 0 degrees latitude and the North and South poles at 90 degrees latitude.
60 degrees east longitude passes through Europe, Asia, and Antarctica.
The 20 degree north line of latitude passes through Africa, Asia, North America, and the Atlantic Ocean.
The only US state that the 64th parallel north crosses is Alaska.
90 degrees is. The latitude of the north pole is 90 degrees north, and you can't go any farther north than that. The latitude of the south pole is 90 degrees south, and you can't go any farther south than that.
Degrees of latitude only go to 90 for north or south.
The greatest possible number of degrees of latitude is 90. Latitude is measured from the equator toward the North Pole or toward the South Pole. The equator is zero degrees of latitude. The North Pole is 90 degrees N, and the South Pole is 90 degrees S.
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).
No. The farther north you go, the greater your north latitude becomes. As you can see, the 16 minutes is greater than the 4 minutes, so the first latitude in the question is farther north than the second one.
The north pole is 90 degrees north latitude. The south pole is 90 degrees south latitude. When you travel from one pole to the other, you go through 180 degrees of latitude. Which isn't so surprising, since that trip takes you halfway around the world.
Latitude is a geographic coordinate that specifies the north-south position of a point on the Earth's surface. It is measured in degrees, with the equator at 0 degrees latitude and the North and South poles at 90 degrees latitude.
I guess it could be Japan. What are the longitudinal coordinates that go along with 40 degrees N latitude?
The prime meridian is located at Greenwich, England in the district of South East London and is denoted as longitude 0 degrees. The prime passes through Europe, Africa, and Antarctica.