If you mean the longitude lines, as seen on a globe, they meet at the North Pole and at the South Pole.
All of the meridians of longitude converge (come together) at the north and south poles.
No, the north-south globe lines, known as longitude lines, are not always the same distance apart. The distance between longitude lines decreases as you move towards the poles. At the equator, longitude lines are farthest apart, while at the poles, they converge at a single point.
Longitudes are lines that run north to south on a globe. At the poles, longitudes converge and meet because all lines of longitude, or meridians, come together at a single point. This means that at the poles, there is no east or west direction left to differentiate between, so the longitudes effectively merge together.
Yes, and again at the south pole.
Lines of latitude are all parallel to each other, so do not converge. Lines of longitude do converge, at the north and the south poles.
They come together at the North and South Poles.
They don't. Lines of longitude come together at the North and south Poles.
All meridians of longitude converge at the north and south poles.
All of the meridians of longitude converge (come together) at the north and south poles.
All possible lines of longitude come together at two points, called the north pole and the south pole. The south pole is located in the continent of Antarctica.
You're fishing for "meridians of longitude", but they are not parallel. They all come together and merge in a single point at the north pole and the south pole.
No, the north-south globe lines, known as longitude lines, are not always the same distance apart. The distance between longitude lines decreases as you move towards the poles. At the equator, longitude lines are farthest apart, while at the poles, they converge at a single point.
All longitudes converge at the north and south poles. To look at it another way,the north pole is located at 90 degrees north latitude and every longitude.
Longitude lines are not parallel because they converge at the poles. They are farthest apart at the equator and gradually come together as they approach the poles, eventually meeting at the North and South Poles. This convergence is due to the Earth's spherical shape.
Longitudes are lines that run north to south on a globe. At the poles, longitudes converge and meet because all lines of longitude, or meridians, come together at a single point. This means that at the poles, there is no east or west direction left to differentiate between, so the longitudes effectively merge together.
All longitudes converge at the north and south poles.No matter what longitude you're at,-- if you stay on it and go north, you wind up at the north pole,-- if you stay on it and go south, you wind up at the south pole,because all longitudes come together at the poles.
Yes, and again at the south pole.