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Latitude and Longitude
or Finding your way around a map
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Latitude and Longitude
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Latitude and Longitude
Geographers divided the Earth into two hemispheres. The north and the south.
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They are divided by a horizontal imaginary line called the Equator The Equator is 0o latitude.
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Latitude and Longitude
They also divided it into the eastern and western hemispheres by an imaginary line called the Prime Meridian.
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Latitude and Longitude
The Prime Meridian is 0o longitude. It goes through Greenwich, England.
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Everything north of the Equator is in the Northern Hemisphere. Everything south of the Equator is in the Southern Hemisphere.
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Everything west of the Prime Meridian is in the Western Hemisphere. Everything east of the Prime Meridian is in the Eastern Hemisphere.
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Where does that put us?
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The horizontal lines on the map are lines of latitude or parallels. They are parallel to the Equator
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Latitude lines are given in degrees north or south of the Equator.
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Latitude Lines are equal in distance apart at all points
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The vertical lines on the map are longitude lines or meridians. They are given in degrees east or west of the Prime Meridian.
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It is called the prime because it is the primary meridian that others are based on.
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Longitude Lines are the farthest apart at the equator, and they are closer together at the poles.
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Measured in degrees. Latitude º North or South The North and South Poles are at 90º latitude.
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Longitude º East or West A sphere, like the Earth is 360º around. Each Hemisphere, the East or the West, is 180º around.
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At 180o longitude there is line exactly opposite the Prime Meridian and is called the International Date Line.
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When you cross the International Date Line you move forward or backward one day.
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The International Date Line is in the Pacific. Moving toward California you gain a day. - Moving toward China you go backward one day. * You get to do the whole day over!! June 8 June 7 * Where does the time go? June 8 June 7
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Two important parallels are 23 ½o N which is the Tropic of Cancer and 23 ½o S which is the Tropic of Capricorn.
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Other important lines of latitude are the Arctic Circle at 66 ½o N and the Antarctic Circle at 66 ½o S.
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- Absolute locations are always given with the latitude first and then the longitude.
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Map Scale The scale of a map tells you how the map’s features compare in size with Earth’s surface.
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Map Scale This comparison is usually shown as a ratio, such as one inch on the map equals one mile (or one kilometer) on the Earth.
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Map Scale A map can be a large-scale map, which shows a small area of the Earth’s surface, or a small-scale map, which shows a large area.
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Map Scale A map scale can be expressed in several ways.
A graphic scale will show a line divided into segments of equal length and then marked in units of measurement.
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Map Scale A verbal scale shows written abbreviations , such as “1 cm = 1 km.” A representative fraction scale (such as 1:100,000) will tell you that one unit on the map equals a specified number of units on Earth.
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Graphic Scale How to use: Mark on a piece of paper the distance and place the marked paper on the scale to determine the distance
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Map Orientation When you are reading a map, you have to orient yourself to which direction the top, bottom, left, and right represent.
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Map Orientation If there is any doubt about a map’s orientation, look for the compass rose, an arrow indicating direction, somewhere on the map.
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