120 degrees east
180 of them.
The country that lies at 40 degrees south latitude and 70 degrees west longitude is Argentina.
We were going along fine there until we got almost to the end of the question. That's where we found that you too are one of the huge number of people who thinks that there's a standard set of "lines". There isn't. Some maps and globes have some lines of constant latitude and longitude printed on them, and some don't. The ones that do may have them printed every 45 degrees, or every 30 degrees, or every 20, 15 or 10 degrees. It's completely up to the publisher of the globe or the map. The mapping software that I use will print a line every 2 seconds of longitude if I want them. That would be 648,000 lines of longitude around the world. If the International Date Line had not been zigged and zagged to avoid splitting states, countries, or islands into two different calendar dates, it would have exactly followed the meridian of 180 degrees longitude ... directly opposite the Prime Meridian and 180 degrees away from it, both east and west.
The country that lies at approximately 55 degrees north latitude and 115 degrees west longitude is Canada.
Australia
180 degrees
180 degrees
180°
180 of them.
The capital city that lies at about 105 degrees West longitude is Denver, Colorado. Its exact coordinates are 39.74 degrees North and 104.98 degrees West.
The continent that lies at 30 degrees south latitude and 120 degrees east longitude is Australia.
The country that lies at 40 degrees south latitude and 70 degrees west longitude is Argentina.
Correct. The town of Greenwich, in England, lies on the Prime meridian (or zero degrees longitude)
We were going along fine there until we got almost to the end of the question. That's where we found that you too are one of the huge number of people who thinks that there's a standard set of "lines". There isn't. Some maps and globes have some lines of constant latitude and longitude printed on them, and some don't. The ones that do may have them printed every 45 degrees, or every 30 degrees, or every 20, 15 or 10 degrees. It's completely up to the publisher of the globe or the map. The mapping software that I use will print a line every 2 seconds of longitude if I want them. That would be 648,000 lines of longitude around the world. If the International Date Line had not been zigged and zagged to avoid splitting states, countries, or islands into two different calendar dates, it would have exactly followed the meridian of 180 degrees longitude ... directly opposite the Prime Meridian and 180 degrees away from it, both east and west.
The country that lies at approximately 55 degrees north latitude and 115 degrees west longitude is Canada.
Casablanca in Morocco.
Poland