what is the latitude & longitude of Europe?
48 degrees 41' 27" N, 9 degress 8' 26" E
http://www.travelmath.com/continent/Europe
here is the site that gave me that answer[in case its hard for you to understand sumhow] i hoped it helps :)
There is no longitude and latitude of the earth. There are imaginary lines of latitude
and longitude on the eart. Maybe that's not what you are asking. If it isn't then
latitude is across (a good way to remember it is latitude is fatitude). And longitude
is up and down.
Longitude and latitude are angles used to describe the location of places on
Earth. So Earth has every latitude and everylongitude somewhere on it.
You could say that Earth's coordinates are:
-- Latitude:
the range from zero to 90 degrees south,
and the range from zero to 90 degrees north.
-- Longitude:
the range from zero to 180 degrees east,
and the range from zero to 180 degrees west.
If you pick any number within these ranges, you wind up at a point
that's somewhere on Earth.
theres no real longitude or latitude it varires srry:(
Europe stretches from 71 degrees north to 34 degrees north latitude. It extends in longitude from 24 degrees west to 62 degrees east.
Latitude and longitude are used to find the degrees horizontally and vertically around the earth, pin-pointing a location.
Longitude and latitude are measured in terms of degrees, minutes and seconds. Longitude has 360 degrees, while latitude 180 degrees of latitude.
Lines of latitude and longitude allows any position on the Earth to be plotted.
Longitude and latitude are coordinates used to describe the location of points on the earth's surface. Since the planet Venus is not located on the earth's surface, its location can't be described by any combination of latitude and longitude.
Latitude and longitude are numbers that describe the location of a point on the Earth's surface. A nickel is not nailed down, so you can move it around to any place on Earth, drop it on the ground, and give it any latitude and longitude you want.
alberuni invented the longitude and latitude of earth.
Every point on Earth has both a longitude and a latitude. And if someone gives you a longitude and a latitude, you can use them to find exactly one point on Earth.
Latitude runs east to west of the earth and longitude lines rubs north to south of the earth.
Once you name a longitude and latitude, you've nailed down a single point on the Earth's surface, and no other point anywhere on Earth can have the same longitude and latitude.
There is no such location. Every point on Earth has a latitude and longitude, otherwise that system wouldn't be much good for navigation.
Every point on Earth has a longitude and a latitude. The only exceptions arethe north and south poles. Each of them has a latitude and every longitude.
Longitude and latitude are measured in terms of degrees, minutes and seconds. Longitude has 360 degrees, while latitude 180 degrees of latitude.
Latitude and longitude are used to find the degrees horizontally and vertically around the earth, pin-pointing a location.
longitude and latitude
Every point on the surface of the earth has latitude and longitude. If the latitude and longitude of a point are given and they're sufficiently accurate, the point can be found within less than an inch, anywhere on earth.
Latitude and longitude are able to pinpoint a certain location on Earth accurately on a map.
We use latitude and longitude to precisely describe the location of places on the surface of the Earth.