No, the longitudinal lines run perpendicular to the Equator, from the North Pole to the South Pole. They converge at the poles and are farthest apart at the Equator.
Lines of latitude are parallel to the equator, and that includes the Arctic and Antarctic Circles. The Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn are also parallel to the equator.See the link below
No, the longitudinal lines do not run parallel to the Tropic of Capricorn. Longitudinal lines run north-south from the North Pole to the South Pole, while the Tropic of Capricorn is a specific latitude line that runs parallel to the Equator.
The only lines that can run parallel to the Prime Meridian on any map are other meridians of longitude, and the only map on which they can be printed parallel to it is a Mercator Projection. They are not really parallel to the Prime Meridian.
Lilies typically have parallel venation in their leaves, where the veins run parallel to each other from the base to the tip of the leaf. This is characteristic of monocotyledonous plants like lilies.
gang
There are no parallel lines that run FROM the equator. Lines that are parallel TO the equator are the latitudes.
parallel lines. they run side by side but never intersect
parallel lines.....
On software development project what kinds of activities can be performed in parallel. Why the activity graph sometimes hides the interdependencies of these activities.
Longitude; not parallel
Toilet
Lines that run parallel to the equator are called latitude lines or parallels.
when the veins in plants run parallel to each other.This is called parallel venation
No, the longitudinal lines run perpendicular to the Equator, from the North Pole to the South Pole. They converge at the poles and are farthest apart at the Equator.
Lines of latitude run parallel to the Equator (which is zero latitude).
Parallel lines run in the same direction. If they are intersected by one line and that line is perpendicular to both, then it proves that the lines run parallel to each other.