The several lines which, you observe to be drawn from one pole to the other, cutting the equator at right angles, are called meridians; the number of these is unlimited, as a line passing through any place, directly to the poles, is called the meridian of that place. When any one of these meridians is exactly opposite to the sun, it is mid-day, or twelve o'clock in the day, at all the places situated any where on that meridian; and, at the places situated on the opposite meridian, it is consequently midnight.
Emily. To places situated equally distant from these two meridians, it must then be six o'clock.
Mrs. B. Yes; if they are to the east of the sun's meridian it is six o'clock in the afternoon, because they will have previously passed the sun; if to the west, it is six o'clock in the morning, and that meridian will be proceeding towards the sun.
Those circles which divide the globe into two equal parts, such as the equator and the ecliptic, are called greater circles; to distinguish them from those which divide it into two unequal parts, as the tropics, and polar circles, which are called lesser circles. All circles, you know, are imagined to be divided into 360 equal parts, called degrees, and degrees are again divided into 60 equal parts, called minutes. The diameter of a circle is a right line drawn across it, and passing through its centre; were you, for instance, to measure across this round table, that would give you its diameter; but were you to measure all round the edge of it, you would then obtain its circumference.
Now Emily, you may tell me exactly how many degrees are contained in a meridian?
Emily. A meridian, reaching from one pole to the other, is half a circle, and must therefore contain 180 degrees.
Mrs. B. Very well; and what number of degrees are there from the equator to one of the poles?
Caroline. The equator being equally distant from either pole, that distance must be half of a meridian, or a quarter of the circumference of a circle, and contain 90 degrees.
Mrs. B. Besides the usual division of circles into degrees, the ecliptic is divided into twelve equal parts, called signs, which bear the name of the constellations through which this circle passes in the heavens. The degrees measured on the meridians from the equator, either towards the north, or towards the south, are called degrees of latitude, of which there may be 90; those measured from east to west, either on the equator, or any of the lesser circles, are called degrees of longitude, of which there may be 180; these lesser circles are also called parallels of latitude. Of these parallels there may be any number; a circle drawn from east to west, at any distance from the equator, will always be parallel to it, and is therefore called a parallel of latitude.