How many miles between degrees of longitude?
And, I have bottled and canned water (unopened) on hand since last September. Any chance it's gone bad? No dates on containers.
Two safety questions......
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- dixiebreeze
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Two safety questions......
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ColdFront77
Re: Two safety questions......
dixiebreeze wrote:How many miles between degrees of longitude?
The number of miles between degrees of longitude decrease as you go north; i.e. 75.0°W to 76.0°W is (roughly) 65.5 miles.
One degree latitude is approximately 69 miles across the world.
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- dixiebreeze
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- dixiebreeze
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soonertwister
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The definition of a nautical mile is on minute of the circumference of the earth. 60 minutes = 1 degree, or 60 nautical miles.
Note that the distance between degrees of longitude shrinks as you move away from the equator toward the poles, while one degree of change in latitude north or south is always 60 nautical miles anywhere on earth.
Some rough conversion numbers you can use:
Just like 1 knot = 1.15 mph, 1 nautical mile = 1.15 statute miles.
Thus one degree of change in longitude at the equator = 60 nautical miles or 60 x 1.5 = 69 statute miles.
Here are rough calculations for distances of one degree of longitude at intervals from the equator, north or south to the poles:
Latitude / Nautical Miles / Statute Miles
00 / 60.00 / 69.00
05 / 59.77 / 68.74
10 / 59.09 / 67.95
15 / 57.96 / 66.65
20 / 56.38 / 64.84
25 / 54.38 / 62.54
30 / 51.96 / 59.76
35 / 49.15 / 56.52
40 / 45.96 / 52.86
45 / 42.43 / 48.79
50 / 38.57 / 44.35
55 / 34.41 / 39.58
60 / 30.00 / 34.50
65 / 25.36 / 29.16
70 / 20.52 / 23.60
75 / 15.53 / 17.86
80 / 10.42 / 11.98
85 / 05.23 / 06.01
Hope that helps...
Note that the distance between degrees of longitude shrinks as you move away from the equator toward the poles, while one degree of change in latitude north or south is always 60 nautical miles anywhere on earth.
Some rough conversion numbers you can use:
Just like 1 knot = 1.15 mph, 1 nautical mile = 1.15 statute miles.
Thus one degree of change in longitude at the equator = 60 nautical miles or 60 x 1.5 = 69 statute miles.
Here are rough calculations for distances of one degree of longitude at intervals from the equator, north or south to the poles:
Latitude / Nautical Miles / Statute Miles
00 / 60.00 / 69.00
05 / 59.77 / 68.74
10 / 59.09 / 67.95
15 / 57.96 / 66.65
20 / 56.38 / 64.84
25 / 54.38 / 62.54
30 / 51.96 / 59.76
35 / 49.15 / 56.52
40 / 45.96 / 52.86
45 / 42.43 / 48.79
50 / 38.57 / 44.35
55 / 34.41 / 39.58
60 / 30.00 / 34.50
65 / 25.36 / 29.16
70 / 20.52 / 23.60
75 / 15.53 / 17.86
80 / 10.42 / 11.98
85 / 05.23 / 06.01
Hope that helps...
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