Geography, asked by arnavmishra4455, 1 year ago

What is the significance of these lines of latitude

Answers

Answered by AJtopper0348
4

There are many lines of latitude that have local significance. For me, the 49th line of latitude north of the equator is significant because it forms the boundary between the United States and Canada in my region. The 46.5807 line of latitude is importantbecause that is where I live.


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Answered by arnavahale06
0

Answer:

The “major lines” of latitude that have world-wide significance are the Equator, the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, and the Arctic and Antarctic Circles.

The “major lines” of latitude that have world-wide significance are the Equator, the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, and the Arctic and Antarctic Circles.The Equator is the only line of latitude that divides the Earth in half, and it is the line of latitude where the length of the day and night are both always 12 hours.

The “major lines” of latitude that have world-wide significance are the Equator, the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, and the Arctic and Antarctic Circles.The Equator is the only line of latitude that divides the Earth in half, and it is the line of latitude where the length of the day and night are both always 12 hours.The Tropic of Cancer is most northerly latitude where the Sun ever passes directly overhead, which happens during the day of the June Solstice.

The “major lines” of latitude that have world-wide significance are the Equator, the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, and the Arctic and Antarctic Circles.The Equator is the only line of latitude that divides the Earth in half, and it is the line of latitude where the length of the day and night are both always 12 hours.The Tropic of Cancer is most northerly latitude where the Sun ever passes directly overhead, which happens during the day of the June Solstice.The Tropic of Capricorn is the most southerly latitude where the Sun ever passes directly overhead, which happens during the day of the December Solstice.

The “major lines” of latitude that have world-wide significance are the Equator, the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, and the Arctic and Antarctic Circles.The Equator is the only line of latitude that divides the Earth in half, and it is the line of latitude where the length of the day and night are both always 12 hours.The Tropic of Cancer is most northerly latitude where the Sun ever passes directly overhead, which happens during the day of the June Solstice.The Tropic of Capricorn is the most southerly latitude where the Sun ever passes directly overhead, which happens during the day of the December Solstice.The Arctic Circle is the most northerly latitude that you can see the Sun from on the December Solstice, or the most southerly latitude that has 24 hours of sunlight on the June Solstice.

The “major lines” of latitude that have world-wide significance are the Equator, the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, and the Arctic and Antarctic Circles.The Equator is the only line of latitude that divides the Earth in half, and it is the line of latitude where the length of the day and night are both always 12 hours.The Tropic of Cancer is most northerly latitude where the Sun ever passes directly overhead, which happens during the day of the June Solstice.The Tropic of Capricorn is the most southerly latitude where the Sun ever passes directly overhead, which happens during the day of the December Solstice.The Arctic Circle is the most northerly latitude that you can see the Sun from on the December Solstice, or the most southerly latitude that has 24 hours of sunlight on the June Solstice.The Antarctic Circle is the most southerly latitude that you can see the Sun from on the June Solstice, or the most northerly latitude that has 24 hours of sunlight on the December solstice.

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