

General CommentIncredible song, no other way to really describe it. we are not the same.Īnd in the parallels we struggle to upkeep, It’s clear the only lines between the ones we preserve. In the tension between devouring want or simple need struggle to upkeep, there is a better way for us to be set free.įrom all it is we crave, there must be more to life than to simply stay alive. I am a walking contradiction that’s found consistencyĬonsuming everything, all without producing sustenance. Never starving yet never quite satisfied. We are overfed and under.undernourished, yearning for something more. “Latitude lines” By Latitude_(PSF).png: Pearson Scott Foresman, donated to the Wikimedia Foundationderivative work: Gregors (talk) 08:13, 27 March 2011 (UTC) – Latitude_(PSF).We are all comatose. “Longitude (PSF)” By Pearson Scott Foresman – Archives of Pearson Scott Foresman, donated to the Wikimedia Foundation→This file has been extracted from another file: PSF L-540004.png (Public Domain) via Commons Wikimedia We express time using these longitudes and latitudes.Any specific geographical point can be located by using its longitude and latitude.įor example, if we take the well-known Washington, DC it can be approximately measured and read as 39 1/2 N.Each meridian or longitude is perpendicular to all circles of latitudes or parallels at the intersection points.All locations on the same longitude fall in the same time zone.Locations with the same latitude do not fall in the same time zone.To cross all meridians, you have to travel 24,000 miles.To cross all parallels, you have to travel 12,000 miles.Every meridian on Earth has the same length.

Every parallel in the same hemisphere has a different length.Positive values can be used east of the Prime Meridian and negative values in the west of the Prime Meridian.Positive values may be used in the Northern hemisphere and negative values in the Southern hemisphere.Letters E or W are used to represent direction.Letters N and S are used to denote the location.Values for longitude range from 0 (the Prime Meridian) to 180 degrees.

