This question does not have an unambiguous answer.
If you start your voyage at 30oS latitude, then travel due south to 60oS you have completed the first stage of the specified journey. At 60oS you can turn east and travel as far as you wish; sticking on the 60o S parallel you could keep on going till you came right back to where you started on 60oS.
Starting at 30oS, you can pick your longitude so that after travelling 30o to the south and 60o to the east you are still in the same ocean as before, and do this without running aground on the way. You can also take a trip from the Atlantic to the Indian, the Indian to the Pacific, or the Pacific to the Atlantic. You can not reverse the directions of the last three.
If you were to modify the qn to "starting on the Equator, travel 30oN then 60oE, the answer would be, unambiguously, the Pacific.
130 degrees north latitude does not exist because the maximum degree of latitude is 90, both north and south.
Nope... those coordinates would place you in the Pacific ocean !
There is no such latitude as "150 degrees north". The greatest possible north latitude is 90 degrees . . . at the north pole.
The nearest major city is Brasilia, Brazil.
At 21 degrees 17 minutes north latitude and 180 degrees longitude, you would find the International Date Line in the Pacific Ocean. It serves as the dividing line between two consecutive calendar days.
The Arctic Ocean, the North Pole.The correct answer would be the North Pole.
130 degrees north latitude does not exist because the maximum degree of latitude is 90, both north and south.
The latitude of the North Pole is 90 degrees North. Therefore, the ocean would be the Arctic Ocean, though covered mainly by a vast floating ice cap.
Nope... those coordinates would place you in the Pacific ocean !
There is no such latitude as "150 degrees north". The greatest possible north latitude is 90 degrees . . . at the north pole.
The nearest major city is Brasilia, Brazil.
no, you would be in england.
You would be swimming in the English Channel.
At 21 degrees 17 minutes north latitude and 180 degrees longitude, you would find the International Date Line in the Pacific Ocean. It serves as the dividing line between two consecutive calendar days.
The arctic ocean. The North pole is just frozen ocean.
That point is in the north Pacific Ocean, about 995 miles southwest of Anchorage, 1,730 miles west of Seattle, 1,850 miles north of Honolulu, and 3,140 miles northeast of the center of Tokyo.
If you were located at 20 degrees north latitude and 60 degrees west longitude, you would be in water, specifically in the Atlantic Ocean, north of the islands of Antigua and Barbuda in the Lesser Antilles.