The meridians (lines of longitude) run from the North Pole to the South Pole. The Prime Meridian (zero Longitude) passes through Greenwich, England. Therefore, the answer to your question is the 'North Pole'.
The ends of all meridians of longitude converge at the north and south poles. Their centers are all on the equator.
There is no fixed set of meridians. A meridian is just an imaginary line that takesshape when you choose any longitude and mark a little dot at every point onEarth with that same longitude.If you were to begin at any longitude, travel straight east or west all the wayaround the Earth until you arrived back at your starting point, and make a markin your notebook every time you cover an interval of 5 degrees of longitude, thenyou would wind up with 360/5 = 72 marks in your notebook.
All meridians of longitude begin and end at the same two points ... the north and south poles. Although they all appear parallel to each other as they cross the equator, I guess it's more comfortable to say that they're not parallel, since they all intersect.
Begin this dot structure with a B atom in the center. In each cardinal direction is one singly bonded F atom with three pairs of dots. The structure is then bracketed and a superscript of 1- is added.
Begin can already be used as a verb. For example, "to begin something" is an action and therefore a verb.
All meridians of longitude converge at the north pole, which is the north extremity of the Earth's rotational axis. They also converge at the south pole, which is the south extremity of the Earth's rotational axis. Neither ponit is the 'beginning' or 'end' of the meridians.
The ends of all meridians of longitude converge at the north and south poles. Their centers are all on the equator.
The North Pole
Menachem Begin Heritage Center was created in 1998.
They begin with a faceoff at center ice.
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sports center began on September 7,1979
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