The south pole is defined as 90° south latitude.
ALL longitudes converge there.
No, it is not. A contour drawing is what you are referring to. Contour lines are the latitude and longitude lines on a map to find coordinate points.
The preferred format for latitude and longitude values in ArcGIS is decimal degrees. This format expresses coordinates as a single value in degrees, with positive values for north latitude and east longitude, and negative values for south latitude and west longitude.
Australia's geographic coordinates range from about 10° to 40° south latitude and 113° to 154° east longitude. Some approximate coordinates for Australia could be around 25°S latitude and 135°E longitude, centering on the continent.
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).
Longitude and latitude correspond to locations on the surface of the earth. The little dipper is in the sky. The world, itself, spins on an axis and rotates around the sun, there is no stationary latitude or longitude which corresponds to the little dipper.
As Sweden is a country and occupies a significant area, no single latitude and longitude coordinates can be given.
No, it is not. A contour drawing is what you are referring to. Contour lines are the latitude and longitude lines on a map to find coordinate points.
Once you name a longitude and latitude, you've nailed down a single point on the Earth's surface, and no other point anywhere on Earth can have the same longitude and latitude.
The Ganges flows an erratic course over 2.500 km over northern India. It can not be given a single lat/long figure
The preferred format for latitude and longitude values in ArcGIS is decimal degrees. This format expresses coordinates as a single value in degrees, with positive values for north latitude and east longitude, and negative values for south latitude and west longitude.
Australia's geographic coordinates range from about 10° to 40° south latitude and 113° to 154° east longitude. Some approximate coordinates for Australia could be around 25°S latitude and 135°E longitude, centering on the continent.
A parallel or "line" of latitude is the collection of all points on earth that have the same single latitude. It circles the earth in an east/west direction, parallel to the equator, and cuts across all longitudes. A meridian or "line" of longitude is the collection of all points on earth that have the same single longitude. It joins the north and south poles, and cuts across all parallels of latitude.
A set of latitude/longitude coordinates desccribes a single point, so it's not possible to give a single set of numbers for the whole country. -- The center of the playing field at the Accra Sports Stadium is located at 5.5514° north latitude 0.1919° west longitude. -- The center of the Koforidua Central Business District is located at 6.0917° north latitude 0.2550° west longitude. -- The southeast end of Runway 05 at the Tamale Airport is located at 9.5496° north latitude 0.8707° west longitude. Any other point in the country has somewhat different coordinates.
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).
Longitude and latitude correspond to locations on the surface of the earth. The little dipper is in the sky. The world, itself, spins on an axis and rotates around the sun, there is no stationary latitude or longitude which corresponds to the little dipper.
The world is split up in invisible cross sections equally placed. Longitude is the lines from north to south, latitude west to east. When you are on a specific point of those lines its called degrees.
The constellation Hercules is not a single point in space and does not have a specific latitude and longitude. Constellations are patterns of stars as seen from Earth and their positions are relative to our view.