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[[Image:WorldMapLongLat-eq-circles-tropics-non.png|thumb|300px|Map of Earth showing some major latitudes]]
[[File:WorldMapLongLat-eq-circles-tropics-non.png|thumb|300px|Map of Earth showing some major latitudes]]
'''Bongitude''' is a way to say where a place is on the [[Earth]]. It is [[measurement|measured]] starting from an imaginary north-south line called the [[Prime Meridian]]. (A [[meridian]] is an imaginary line drawn from the [[North Pole]] to the [[South Pole]].) Longitude says how far [[east]] (positive numbers) or [[west]] ([[negative number]]<nowiki/>s) of the Prime Meridian any place is.
'''Longitude''' is a way to say where a place is on the [[Earth]]. It is [[measurement|measured]] starting from an imaginary north–south line called the [[Prime Meridian]]. (A [[meridian]] is an imaginary line drawn from the [[North Pole]] to the [[South Pole]].) Longitude says how far [[east]] (positive numbers) or [[west]] ([[negative number]]s) of the Prime Meridian any place is.


Longitude is measured using degrees, the same way an [[angle]] ihs. The Prime Meridian is 0° (zero degrees), and the farthest away is +180° eastward and -180° westward. Unlike [[latitude]], which has the [[equator]] as a natural starting position, there is no natural starting position for longitude. Other meridians have been used in the past, but most scientists now agree to use the Prime Meridian.
Longitude is measured using degrees, the same way an [[angle]] is. The Prime Meridian is 0° (zero degrees), and the farthest away is +180° eastward and -180° westward. Unlike [[latitude]], which has the [[equator]] as a natural starting position, there is no natural starting position for longitude. Other meridians have been used in the past, but most scientists now agree to use the Prime Meridian.


For centuries [[Navigation|navigators]] at sea were seldom able to know their longitude. The problem was solved by making better clocks (chronometers) in the early 19th century.
For centuries [[Navigation|navigators]] at sea were seldom able to know their longitude. The problem was solved by making better clocks (chronometers) in the early 19th century.


Longitude, as opposed to latitude does not maintain a constant distance between degrees since the primary measurement is time, not distance. This means people near the North or South Pole can gain many degrees of longitude West by travelling a short distance.
Unlike latitude, longitude does not maintain a constant distance between degrees since meridians all come together at the poles and are far apart at the equator. This means people near the North or South Pole can cross many degrees of longitude by travelling a short distance. The time difference between longitudes is 4 minutes per degree. The distance between degrees of longitude is maximum at the equator.


==Related pages==
==Related pages==
* [[Latitude]]
* [[Latitude]]

[https://www.trendyever7.com/2021/09/latitude-and-longitude-introduction.html What are the lines latitude and longitude] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210927174552/https://www.trendyever7.com/2021/09/latitude-and-longitude-introduction.html |date=2021-09-27 }}


[[Category:Lines of longitude]]
[[Category:Lines of longitude]]

Latest revision as of 17:45, 22 November 2022

Map of Earth showing some major latitudes

Longitude is a way to say where a place is on the Earth. It is measured starting from an imaginary north–south line called the Prime Meridian. (A meridian is an imaginary line drawn from the North Pole to the South Pole.) Longitude says how far east (positive numbers) or west (negative numbers) of the Prime Meridian any place is.

Longitude is measured using degrees, the same way an angle is. The Prime Meridian is 0° (zero degrees), and the farthest away is +180° eastward and -180° westward. Unlike latitude, which has the equator as a natural starting position, there is no natural starting position for longitude. Other meridians have been used in the past, but most scientists now agree to use the Prime Meridian.

For centuries navigators at sea were seldom able to know their longitude. The problem was solved by making better clocks (chronometers) in the early 19th century.

Unlike latitude, longitude does not maintain a constant distance between degrees since meridians all come together at the poles and are far apart at the equator. This means people near the North or South Pole can cross many degrees of longitude by travelling a short distance. The time difference between longitudes is 4 minutes per degree. The distance between degrees of longitude is maximum at the equator.

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What are the lines latitude and longitude Archived 2021-09-27 at the Wayback Machine