The major line of latitude that goes through Ohio is the 40th parallel north.
Equator latitude lines
The equator
US-1 leaves the Florida mainland heading down into the Keys at 25°15' north latitude.The southernmost point in the Keys, about 11 miles beyond Key West in the National WildlifeRefuge, is at 24°31' north latitude.
Suppose the top face of the pyramid is ABCD with the square EFGH directly below it.Suppose AC and BD meet at P, the apex of the pyramid.Make a cut with a plane through P which is parallel to AB and goes through EF.Make a cut with a plane through P which is parallel to BC and goes through FG.Make a cut with a plane through P which is parallel to CD and goes through GH.Make a cut with a plane through P which is parallel to DA and goes through HE.The result will be the square-based pyramid PEFGH.
You can find Antarctica south of about 60 degrees S, in every line of latitude.
Countries that have a latitude of 36 degrees include Italy, Turkey, Iran, and Japan.
The Latitude is the line
a transversal
40 degrees north
Every position on the Earth has a latitude and a longitude measured in degrees. Changing the latitude while keeping the same longitude means you are moving north or south along a meridian. On the other hand changing the longitude but not the latitude means that you move east/west along a parallel of latitude. Lines of latitude are called 'small circles' (except the equator) because they get smaller and smaller at higher latitudes, but they are always parallel, so they are parallels of latitude. Lines of longitude are 'great circles' because they always lie in a plane that goes through the Earth's centre, and they are called meridians. Your personal meridian at this moment is a great circle that contains you, the north and south poles, and the centre of the Earth. Get an onion and mark a small 'x' on it, then cut it in two at the 'x' making sure to cut it through its north and south poles as well. The cut plane marks the meridian of the 'x'.
No, lines of latitude do not shorten towards the poles. Lines of latitude are parallel to each other and are the same distance apart from each other at any point on Earth.