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the equator

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cucuhullan | 23:43 Fri 24th Nov 2006 | Quizzes & Puzzles
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Does anyone know how many nautical miles one degree of latitude represents at the equator.
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60 nautical miles - I think! :o)
According to which source you go to, the earths equatorial circumference is about 24,900 miles. Divide this by 360 and you get 69.166666 miles/degree.
I'm sorry if I was being oversimplistic - I worked on the basis that a nautical mile is 1 minute of arc therefore 1 degree, having sixty minutes, equals 60 nautical miles :o)
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My thanks to you both.
I am going assume that 69.166666 miles is equivalent to 60 nautical miles and therefore I will be able to sleep tonight.!!!
I think the answer they want is 60nm. But sddsddean is going around the equator rather than pole to pole. Dustybun is right, the n.mile was defined as 1 min. or arc (latitude-wise) and is taken as the average value (1852m) - distance at the bulging equator will actually be slightly greater.

Oops, you caught me in an ex-RN mood / mode!
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Thank you Phil7 for your contribution to my ever expanding fount of knowledge.
Sorry, I missed the 'nautical' in your question. 69.166666statute miles = 60.0657nm. If you are not going to worry about the odd 400 feet difference between this and 60nm, I'm certainly not!
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sddsddean,
Thanks for your clarification.
The only time I would worry about 400 feet is if it brought an obnoxious neighbour any closer.!!!!
lol!

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