A key geographical question throughout the human experience
has been, "Where am I?" In classical Greece and China, attempts were
made to create logical grid systems of the world to answer this question. The
ancient Greek geographer Ptolemy
created a grid system and listed the coordinates for places throughout the
known world in his book Geography. But it
wasn't until the middle ages that the latitude and longitude system was
developed and implemented. This system is written in degrees, using the symbol
Latitude
When looking at a map, latitude
lines run horizontally. Latitude lines are also known as parallels since they
are parallel and are an equal distant from each other. Each degree of latitude
is approximately 69 miles (111 km) apart; there is a variation due to the fact
that the earth is not a perfect sphere but an oblate ellipsoid (slightly
egg-shaped). To remember latitude, imagine them as the horizontal rungs of a
ladder ("ladder-tude"). Degrees latitude are numbered from 0° to 90°
north and south. Zero degrees is the equator, the imaginary line which divides
our planet into the northern and southern hemispheres. 90° north is the North
Pole and 90° south is the South Pole.
Longitude
The vertical longitude
lines are also known as meridians. They converge at the poles and are widest at
the equator (about 69 miles or 111 km apart). Zero degrees longitude is located
at Greenwich, England (0°). The degrees continue 180° east and 180° west where
they meet and form the International Date Line in the Pacific Ocean. Greenwich,
the site of the British Royal Greenwich
Observatory, was established as the site of the prime
meridian by an international
conference in 1884.
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