the longitude and latitude lines are responsible for
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THEY ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR STANDARD TIME MERIDIAN.
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Latitude and longitude, coordinate system by means of which the position or location of any place on Earth’s surface can be determined and described.
LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE
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Latitude and longitude, coordinate system by means of which the position or location of any place on Earth’s surface can be determined and described.
latitude and longitude
latitude and longitude
Perspective of the globe with grid formed by parallels of latitude and meridians of longitude
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
Latitude and longitude
QUICK FACTS
KEY PEOPLE
Hipparchus
Sir Harold Jeffreys
RELATED TOPICS
Reference frame
Equator
Polar region
Parallel
Pluviometric equator
Geocentric latitude
Eremian zone
Temperate zone
Arctic Zone
Geographic latitude
explore lines of latitude and longitude
explore lines of latitude and longitude
Overview explaining the coordinate system of latitude and longitude, which is used to describe the location of any place on Earth's surface.
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
See all videos for this article
Latitude is a measurement on a globe or map of location north or south of the Equator. Technically, there are different kinds of latitude—geocentric, astronomical, and geographic (or geodetic)—but there are only minor differences between them. In most common references, geocentric latitude is implied. Given in degrees, minutes, and seconds, geocentric latitude is the arc subtended by an angle at Earth’s centre and measured in a north-south plane poleward from the Equator. Thus, a point at 30°15′20″ N subtends an angle of 30°15′20″at the centre of the globe; similarly, the arc between the Equator and either geographic pole is 90° (one-fourth the circumference of Earth, or 1/4 × 360°), and thus the greatest possible latitudes are 90° N and 90° S. As aids to indicate different latitudinal positions on maps or globes, equidistant circles are plotted and drawn parallel to the Equator and each other; they are known as parallels, or parallels of latitude.
LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE
Home
Science
Physics
Matter & Energy
Latitude and longitude
geography
WRITTEN BY
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Encyclopaedia Britannica's editors oversee subject areas in which they have extensive knowledge, whether from years of experience gained by working on that content or via study for an advanced degree....
See Article History
Latitude and longitude, coordinate system by means of which the position or location of any place on Earth’s surface can be determined and described.
latitude and longitude
latitude and longitude
Perspective of the globe with grid formed by parallels of latitude and meridians of longitude
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
Latitude and longitude
QUICK FACTS
KEY PEOPLE
Hipparchus
Sir Harold Jeffreys
RELATED TOPICS
Reference frame
Equator
Polar region
Parallel
Pluviometric equator
Geocentric latitude
Eremian zone
Temperate zone
Arctic Zone
Geographic latitude
explore lines of latitude and longitude
explore lines of latitude and longitude
Overview explaining the coordinate system of latitude and longitude, which is used to describe the location of any place on Earth's surface.
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
See all videos for this article
Latitude is a measurement on a globe or map of location north or south of the Equator. Technically, there are different kinds of latitude—geocentric, astronomical, and geographic (or geodetic)—but there are only minor differences between them. In most common references, geocentric latitude is implied. Given in degrees, minutes, and seconds, geocentric latitude is the arc subtended by an angle at Earth’s centre and measured in a north-south plane poleward from the Equator. Thus, a point at 30°15′20″ N subtends an angle of 30°15′20″at the centre of the globe; similarly, the arc between the Equator and either geographic pole is 90° (one-fourth the circumference of Earth, or 1/4 × 360°), and thus the greatest possible latitudes are 90° N and 90° S. As aids to indicate different latitudinal positions on maps or globes, equidistant circles are plotted and drawn parallel to the Equator and each other; they are known as parallels, or parallels of latitude.
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