Latitude and Longitude, system of geometrical coordinates
used in designating the location of places on the surface of the earth.
Latitude, which gives the location of a place north or south of the equator, is
expressed by angular measurements ranging from 0° at the equator to 90° at the
poles. Longitude, the location of a place east or west of a north-south line
called the prime meridian, is measured in angles ranging from 0° at the prime
meridian to 180° at the International Date Line.
Degrees of latitude are equally spaced, but the slight
flattening at the poles causes the length of a degree of latitude to vary from
110.57 km (68.70 mi) at the equator to 111.70 km (69.41 mi) at the poles. At
the equator, meridians of longitude 1 degree apart are separated by a distance
of 111.32 km (69.17 mi); at the poles, meridians converge. Each degree of
latitude and longitude is divided into 60 minutes, and each minute divided into
60 seconds, thereby allowing the assignment of a precise numerical location to
any place on earth.