SSW stands for south-southwest, which is a direction located halfway between south and southwest. This direction corresponds to approximately 202.5 degrees on the compass rose.
NNE stands for North-Northeast and corresponds to a direction of 22.5 degrees on the compass rose. It is halfway between North (0 degrees) and Northeast (45 degrees).
If your map shows 100% of the earth, you can follow the compass rose to the far south and find Antarctica: look south of 60 degrees S.
There are 180 degrees between north and south in a compass rose.
You use a compass rose, in case you get lost. A compass rose, gives you all the cardinal directions.
The Compass Rose was created in 1982-07.
There are a few different types of compass roses, including the Mariner's rose, the Sidereal rose, and the Classical rose. Variations exist with the common compass rose in that it depends on how many points or degrees one desires in said compass rose.
135 degrees
NNE stands for North-Northeast and corresponds to a direction of 22.5 degrees on the compass rose. It is halfway between North (0 degrees) and Northeast (45 degrees).
SSW
The bearing between due north (0°) and south-southwest (SSW, which is 202.5°) is 202.5°. To find the angle, you can also calculate it as 180° (due south) plus an additional 22.5° towards the west, which gives you the SSW direction. Thus, SSW is positioned at 202.5° on a compass, positioned between south and southwest.
If your map shows 100% of the earth, you can follow the compass rose to the far south and find Antarctica: look south of 60 degrees S.
idk i belive the compass
There are 180 degrees between north and south in a compass rose.
where did the name "compass rose" come from?
You use a compass rose, in case you get lost. A compass rose, gives you all the cardinal directions.
If you mean the difference between a compass and a compass rose: The compass is the complete instrument. The compass rose is the degree wheel printed under the needle.
The Compass Rose has 273 pages.