51.5081° n, 0.1281° w
The exact location of a place must include both a latitude and a longitude. The latitude and longitude can be point-point a location on the planet as precise as a postage stamp with 7 decimal places or an area as large as ~100 square km with whole decimal degrees.
Tromelin is a sandbar with less than 1 square mile of area, in the Indian Ocean about 220 miles east of Madagascar. The weather station at the north end of its air strip is located at 15.8922° south latitude 54.5247° east longitude.
Buffalo usually range in mountain country like Montana and Washington but buffalo are found in places where there is snow at the usual times and plenty of grasslands to graze in. ================== To come at it from another angle: The obelisk in the center of Niagara Square, at Buffalo NY's City Hall, is located at 42.8864° north latitude 78.8781° west longitude.
Example? The Earth is not flat, so maps can rather accurately show distance or shape. The simple fact that the Earth is round means perfect squares for latitude and longitude would in essence mean the distortion of shape, hence why on some maps you see the stretching out of the poles (as this is where the latitude lines converge). In essence the shape of the Earth means latitude and longitude cannot be perfect squares. Hope this is what you meant by your question.
Every point on Earth has a different set of latitude and longitude, and Buffalo is a big place, with many different points in it. The center of the obelisk in Niagara Square, in front of City Hall, is located at 42.88612° north latitude 78.87813° west longitude. The numbers will be somewhat different at other spots around town.
No, Trafalgar Square is a square in London.
40.750675, -73.993460
Trafalgar Square is in London.
The exact location of a place must include both a latitude and a longitude. The latitude and longitude can be point-point a location on the planet as precise as a postage stamp with 7 decimal places or an area as large as ~100 square km with whole decimal degrees.
There are two fountains in Trafalgar Square.
London's Trafalgar Square was created in 1890.
Trafalgar Square is in London England and commemorates the naval victory over the French fleet at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805.
Trafalgar Square didn't exist before the battle. It was built to commemorate Nelson's victory.
That depends on where you are on Earth, specifically, your latitude. All meridians of longitude converge (meet, come together) at the north and south poles, so any two of them get closer and closer together as you get closer to either pole. One degree of longitude is about 69 miles along the equator, but only 48.8 miles at latitude 45°, 17.9 miles at latitude 75°, and about 6 miles at latitude 85°. So as you get farther from the equator, your 1° x 1° square is getting progressively skinnier. Here's the area of your square at a few different latitudes. Each square is 1 latitude degree tall and 1 longitude degree wide, and the indicated latitude goes straight across its middle: On the equator . . . . . 4,760 square miles 30° . . . . . 4,150 square miles 45° . . . . . 3,375 square miles 60° . . . . . 2,400 square miles 85° . . . . . 415 square miles
Big Ben is not in Trafalgar Square, it is at Westminster Palace.
trafalgar square is the geographic centre of all London
Save the Trafalgar Square Pigeons was created in 2000.