No "named" line of longitude crosses Australia. The Tropic of Capricorn (latitude) crosses Australia.
Any line of longitude (or of latitude, for that matter), that crosses the United States, will divide it in two.
The Prime Meridian crosses Ghana.
Each line of latitude (the ones parallel to the Equator) crosses each line of longitude (the north - south lines).
180 degree longitude or 0 degree longitude means the same thing. Now when someone crosses this line one has to make some changes in the time e.g when one crosses this line and moves towards east it will gain one day, if one crosses and moves towards the west then one losses one day
Australia extends over a range of 10°5' south to 43°36' south ... a span of about 33.5 degrees of latitude.There is no official set of lines to which you're limited or restricted, and you're free to draw as manyor as few lines through this range of latitude as you're comfortable with.The only named line of latitude which crosses Australia is the Tropic of Capricorn.
Longitudinal line 85, 86, 87, and 88 all cross Kentucky.
Approximately 27°E to 165°W (crosses the International Date Line).
All lines of longitude pass through the Equator.
Europe, Africa, and North America check on a map with coordinates
Texas. The 100 degrees west longitude line runs down the center of the state.
Japan occupies the range of longitude between roughly 122.95° and 145.81° East. A meridian ('line') of longitude at any position within that range crosses land or territorial waters of Japan, and you can't get any closer than that.