Answer:
is there an attachment or something?
The answer is the last one because:
- One has three sides and the other has four which doesn't makes it equal.
- One has three vertices and the other has four vertices.
- Obtuse is an angle greater than 90° but less than 180°, so it doesn't have an obtuse angle.
- Yes, it has one right angle each.
There are 7 characteristics of Egypt.
1.Stable food supply
2.social structure
3.government
4.religion
5.culture
6.written language
7.technology.
1.1 Jupiter is named after a roman god of the light and sky.
1.2 Jupiter is 2.5 times the mass of all the other planets combined.
1.3 The Romans called this planet Jupiter because it was the largest object in the sky.
2.1 Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system.
2.2 Jupiter's Giant Red Spot was first photographed on March 5th, 1979.
3.1 Jupiter Has 67 Moons.
3.2 Jupiter Is The Fastest Spinning Planet In The Solar System.
3.3 Jupiter Has Rings.
4.the atmosphere of Jupiter is made up of mostly hydrogen gas and helium gas.
Your question could mean one of two different things.
You could be asking "How do I figure out the longitude and latitude
of, let's say, Killeen, Texas."
The answer to that is: You look on a map or a globe that has latitude
and longitude lines printed on it, find Killeen, Texas, and estimate its
coordinates as well as you can from the lines printed nearest to it.
Or you could be asking "If I'm out in the middle of the ocean at night,
how do I figure out the longitude and latitude of where I am ?"
I'm afraid the answer to that is far too complicated to write here.
All I can say is: The science of "Navigation" was developed over a period
of hundreds of years. If you look at the history of sea exploration through
the centuries, you see how the explorers ventured farther and farther from
their home ports as time went on. The reason for that is that they were
developing better and better methods of figuring out where they were as
they sailed.
And about 20 years ago, that all changed. Drastically. Now, anybody at all
can walk into his neighborhood sporting-goods store, and buy a little device
that fits in his shirt pocket or in the palm of his hand, and whenever he has a
view of the sky, it can give him the latitude and longitude of the place where
he's standing, more accurately than the best navigators in the US Navy or
the British Armada could ever calculate it before.
That was when countries started putting up bunches of little satellites
to broadcast signals to our pocket receivers.
The satellites that the US put up are called the Global Positioning System . . .
the GPS.