3 November 2025

Longitude

The North Pole

When we were in Louth, I spotted a plaque on a wall in the town centre with a steel line reaching to it across the pavement. I was standing on the Prime Meridian line upon which Greenwich Mean Time was devised down in London. It was adopted internationally as recently as 1884.

Anyway, Sheffield is located seventy five miles west of the line. Our longitude position is about 1.5°W. Louth and Greenwich are of course located at 0.0°.

Some regular visitors may recall that I recently painted the word "WEST" on our garden wall. In a follow-up post I tracked the places that sit on the same line of latitude as Sheffield. They included Edmonton, Alberta in Canada - home to blogger Nurse Pixie - the author of "My Life So Far".

So following on from that, using an idea suggested by Tasker Dunham, I wondered what places might sit on our line of longitude. Of course that invisible line begins at The North Pole and heads south across the cold stormy waters of The North Atlantic and The North Sea.

Durham Cathedral

It first crosses land on the English coast of Northumberland before heading to Newcastle-upon-Tyne and down to Durham. Then it enters The People's Republic of Yorkshire, crossing Leeds before Sheffield, then down to Coventry and Oxford with its dreaming spires.

Pamplona, Spain

Over The English Channel and into western France where the only major city that is crossed is Nantes. Then onwards - over The Pyrenees and into Spain - crossing the city of Pamplona. On to The Mediterranean and down to Algeria where our uniting line of longitude passes over the town of Maghnia.

Maghnia, Algeria

Kumasi, Ghana

Down to the Gao region of Mali and into Burkina Faso near Poedogo. Ever southward to Ghana where the line crosses Kumasi. Then leaving the coast of Africa, 1.5°W heads out across The South Atlantic. It does not pass over any islands that I can detect.

The next time the line meets land again is in Antarctica, at an area known as Queen Maud Land which is Norwegian territory. It would surely make a great holiday destination. See below:-
Queen Maud Mountains

25 comments:

  1. I think not even Vikings would enjoy vacationing in Queen Maud Land!

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    1. It would be a nice place for your president to take some solitary time out with a tent, a sleeping bag and a few basic food supplies such as canned lentils and tinned peach slices.

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  2. Maybe a camping holiday in the foothills of Queen Maud Mountains would be nice.

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    1. I agree - much more fun than a Sydney hotel and riding on the Sydney transport system.

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  3. There's a surprising number of places on the line. In this case the word west makes a lot of sense.

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    1. "Not so many places as West-East Mr Kline!"
      "Oh shut up clever clogs!" said Mr Kline.

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  4. No pictures of the Gao region or Poedogo and Kumasi?
    Another fascinating trip halfway around the world. Now where does one get when staying on the same invisible line, crossing the South Pole and then heading back towards the North Pole on the "back" of our beautiful planet?

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    1. Especially for you, I have now added Kumasi, Ghana.

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  5. I followed the line on my small globe and never knew until now that there was an area called Queen Maud Mountains. I don't see it as a holiday destination though. Maybe for Eskimos. Are we still allowed to call them Eskimos? Or are they all Inuit or what?

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    1. Is the "e" word like the "n" word...or even worse - the "a" word!
      (Adelaidean)

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    2. They are called Inuit which means "the people".

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  6. I would have got off at Pamplona. Much warmer.

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    1. Lord Peregrine could have run with the bulls.

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  7. One of the disadvantages of missing Blogland is all the factoids I miss which are contained in your posts.

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    1. So it's my factoids you miss rather than me Graham? Boo-hoo!

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  8. Queen Maud Land sounds an interesting alternative to the Costas!

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  9. I have once in my life (1969) stood with one foot on each side of the Prime Meridian line in Greenwich. Never made any attempt to follow it around the world, though!

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  10. The penguins are very glad that you mentioned the homeland of many of their relatives.

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  11. There's a spot in the American Southwest where you can stand on 4 states at the same time; Arizona, New Mexico, Colorad and Utah all meet up!

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  12. My brother in law went to Antarctica and his photos were amazing, but that's a long trip. He also just got back from Africa.
    I like your idea for trump though:)

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  13. When you get right down to it, we are all connected.

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  14. Years ago a young man from our area was killed during the running of the bulls there. I always think of him when I see a photo about that.
    I'm terrible at geography.

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  15. A fascinating exercise. I shall put it on my to-do list.

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  16. really interesting idea - i wonder how many are now inspired to test the same cross hair for their own home town

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Mr Pudding welcomes all genuine comments - even those with which he disagrees. However, puerile or abusive comments from anonymous contributors will continue to be given the short shrift they deserve. Any spam comments that get through Google/Blogger defences will also be quickly deleted.

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