Hey BrainStuff -- I’m Jonathan Strickland.
So, you’ve probably seen geographic coordinates
like these before, maybe on a GPS device,
or maybe scrawled in a mysterious note you
found in the glove box of a rental car.
But if you never knew exactly what they meant,
fear not – it’s actually pretty simple,
and we are here to make it all clear.
*Intro music*
When you see a set of geographic coordinates
looking like this or like this, you’re reading
latitude and longitude.
Latitude represents north-south location,
and longitude represents east-west location,
usually listed in that order.
By combining them, you can pinpoint any spot
on the surface of the earth.
These coordinates aren’t expressed in units
of distance, but in degrees.
Why?
Because the earth is a sphere.
Imagine a line running from the equator to
the center of the earth, and then another
line running from the center of the earth
to the north or south pole.
These two lines make a 90-degree angle.
All latitudes in each hemisphere can be represented
by drawing a third line somewhere between
them.
So the equator would have 0 degrees latitude,
and the north pole would have 90 degrees north
latitude, and a location halfway between the
north pole and the equator would lie at 45
degrees north.
Same thing for the southern hemisphere, except
you’d call it degrees south.
For more precision, each degree of the earth’s
surface is divided evenly into 60 “minutes,”
and each minute is divided into 60 “seconds.”
If you need to get even more specific, you
can just add decimals to your seconds.
Alternately, you can write the whole coordinate
in decimal notation.
To do this, you have to convert minutes and
seconds, which are base-60, into our regular
base-10 counting system by dividing each unit
by sixty and then summing them up.
The results sometimes look counterintuitive,
but if you’re skeptical you can pause the
video and check out the math.
Lines of longitude, also called meridians,
run north-south and are used to measure position
along the east-west axis.
While the lines of latitude run parallel to
each other, meridians converge at the poles
and spread farthest apart at the equator,
like the segments of an orange.
Longitude is also measured in degrees, but
its zero-degree line is known as the Prime
Meridian, and it runs from the North Pole
to the South Pole through Greenwich, England.
So if the Prime Meridian is zero degrees,
the opposite side of the earth is 180 degrees,
and lines in between are expressed as degrees
east or degrees west, between 0 and 180.
Since the lines of latitude are parallel,
each degree covers about the same distance
the world over – roughly 111 kilometers.
But because meridians converge at the poles,
the distance covered in each degree of longitude
varies hugely depending on your latitude.
At 20 degrees North, which is about the latitude
of Cuba and Hawaii, one degree of longitude
is approximately 104 kilometers.
At 80 degrees North, the latitude of Svalbard
and northern Greenland, it’s only about
19 kilometers.
So let’s say I wanted to go dig up a stash
of hot loot from some coordinates I found
written in a mysterious note.
Even without looking at a map, we can start
to make a guess where this would be.
Since it’s 43 degrees north, it’s almost
halfway between the equator and the north
pole -- again, halfway being 45 degrees.
And since it’s 89 degrees west, it’s almost
halfway west between the prime meridian and
the opposite side of the globe -- halfway
being half of 180 degrees, or 90 degrees.
Based on this alone, you can guess it’s
probably somewhere in North America.
But if we use a map or a digital tool like
Google Earth, we can zoom in and see these
coordinates lead us to ... the U.S. National
Mustard Museum in Middleton, Wisconsin.
Huh.
What’s the weirdest landmark you’ve ever
found on Google Earth?
Paste the coordinates in the comments so everybody
can check it out.
If you liked this video, hit that thumbs-up
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And as always, for answers to all kinds of
questions like this, head over to HowStuffWorks.com.
