To find the GPS coordinates of an address or a place, simply use our latitude and longitude finder. Fill the address field and click on "Get GPS Coordinates" to display its latitude and longitude. The coordinates are displayed in the left column or directly on the interactive gps map. You can also create a free account to access Google Maps coordinates finder.

Latitude and longitude to address: fill the decimal GPS coordinates and click on the corresponding "Get Address" button.

 Address from sexagesimal coordinates: fill the sexagesimal GPS coordinates and click on the corresponding "Get Address" button.


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We opted to center the map on your current location when possible, using the html5 geolocation feature to find out the latitude and longitude of your location. When available, you can also get your location address.

 Where am I? Your location coordinates are provided by your browser, and we can't access them without your consent. We do not keep any record of the location of our users, so feel free to allow the geolocation feature if you find it convenient. Visit this page to check my location.

 If you don't share your location, the map will just be centered on a default GPS location.

Just like every actual house has its address (which includes the number, the name of the street, city, etc), every single point on the surface of earth can be specified by the latitude and longitude coordinates. Therefore, by using latitude and longitude we can specify virtually any point on earth.

The latitude has the symbol of phi, and it shows the angle between the straight line in the certain point and the equatorial plane. The latitude is specified by degrees, starting from 0 and ending up with 90 to both sides of the equator, making latitude Northern and Southern. The equator is the line with 0 latitude. The longitude has the symbol of lambda and is another angular coordinate defining the position of a point on a surface of earth. The longitude is defined as an angle pointing west or east from the Greenwich Meridian, which is taken as the Prime Meridian. The longitude can be defined maximum as 180 east from the Prime Meridian and 180 west from the Prime Meridian.

Both latitude and longitude are measured in degrees, which are in turn divided into minutes and seconds. For example, the tropical zone which is located to the south and to the north from the Equator is determined by the limits of 2326'13.7'' S and 2326'13.7'' N. Or. For example, the geographical coordinates of the mount Ngauruhoe in New Zealand, famous with its being the filming area for the Lord of the Rings movie, has the geographic coordinates of 3909'24.6''S 17537'55.8''E.

Latlong.net is an online geographic tool that can be used to lookup latitude and longitude of a place, and get its coordinates on map. You can search for a place using a city's or town's name, as well as the name of special places, and the correct lat long coordinates will be shown at the bottom of the latitude longitude finder form. At that, the place you found will be displayed with the point marker centered on map. Also the gps coordinates will be displayed below the map.

I like Geography, especially about the Earth. It is so much fun knowing these stuffs, about latitudes and longitudes. I like this website and I am going to copy the link and save to my laptop. Thank You LatLong:)

This is making this really easy to understand for not just me but for those who do not understand this type of things that are hard for people.So all I have to say now really is that whoever made this website is a genius because I still could not get the latitude and longitude 

but after using this website I would just know the latitude and longitude. THANKYOU !!

Please make the narrower...

(the 100px "min-height" only wastes space and makes us scroll when we need to get latitudes and longitudes of numerous cities/locations

("min-height:20px" is perfectly fine - I tried...:)

Why are the lat long coordinates different from the GPS coordinates? I would think that 42.982460N latitude would translate to GPS 42degrees 98'2460"N but it comes up below the map as 42degrees 58'56.856"N.

This tool permits the user to convert latitude and longitude between decimal degrees and degrees, minutes, and seconds. For convenience, a link is included to the National Geodetic Survey's NADCON program, which allows conversions between the NAD83 / WGS84 coordinate system and the older NAD27 coordinate system. NAD27 coordinates are presently used for broadcast authorizations and applications.

I am importing a simple 5 column csv file into QGIS using Add Delimited Text Layer.Each row of the table contains a name, a street address, a postcode, a decimal latitude and a decimal longitude, for example:

In the add layer window (Data Source Manager), I get the file format and encoding recognised; under Geometry Definition, Point co-ordinates is automatically selected with X field linked to my longitude column and Y field as my latitude column.

When I preview the photos on my Z6, I recently see an image on the photo shown with information about latitude, longitude and time. How can I set the camera so that I no longer see this data automatically?

I have a table with multiple location that were initially put in as points and then fields were filled in. I have some locations that I have latitude and longitude addresses for and wanted to type those locations into the table and expected the point to show up on the map but it doesn't, although the shape column does show "point".#table issues

The result, though, is that all addresses are located in the eastern Pacific Ocean - these are all addresses in Iowa - and the culprit appears to be that the geocoding process creates features where X and Y are not the longitude/latitude coordinates from the NAD, but rather are separate coordinates (that I don't recognize; example: X(-168896.13984),Y(5105471.669462)). The rows are coded properly to NAD data, but the long/lat coordinates from the NAD are entered in the "DisplayX" and "DisplayY" fields rather than the X and Y fields. The data in the DisplayX/DisplayY fields is a correct match for the address that was geocoded.

I have data sets on excel spreadsheets and I need to combine and process the data using Alteryx. I amd using Select tool to specify the columns that I need to combine but not sure what data type to assign to my longitude and Latitude data columns. I need to eventually be able to map my data points using visualization software.

I assume you have latitude field and a longitude field that you need to map. Use an Input tool to bring the data into Alteryx. A Select tool allow you change the latitude and longitude fields to the necessary numeric format. The Create Points tool in Alteryx accepts floating point (double) fields, or integers (floating points x 1000000), or floating points in other projections. Alteryx can then be used to analyse the points and produce maps/reporting on your spatial data.

I have a survey that uses a geopoint question and has the option to extract EXIF data from a photo as well. When I open the data for this survey, all I get for latitude and longitude are from the photos, which are meant as a fail-safe in case the location is not accurate. The geopoint only seems to be returning a globalid. Is there a way to recover my coordinates? If not, how do I convert globalid to latitude and longitude?

It's not a matter of safety, its just a matter of precision.I wouldn't consider floats, but doubles are what i think are ideal here.You just need to see what's the most precision you can get out of a double and see if it fits a regular longitude/latitude value. I think it's more then enough.

The only latitude and longitude value you have in this caseis the geo-located point. If you have a different lat/long for the the objects you want to move, figure out how far away from the geo-location coordinates the point is in whatever units you are using and enter those using the [x,y,z] values.

The geographic coordinate system (GCS) is a spherical or geodetic coordinate system for measuring and communicating positions directly on the Earth as latitude and longitude.[1] It is the simplest, oldest and most widely used of the various spatial reference systems that are in use, and forms the basis for most others. Although latitude and longitude form a coordinate tuple like a cartesian coordinate system, the geographic coordinate system is not cartesian because the measurements are angles and are not on a planar surface.[2][self-published source?]

A full GCS specification, such as those listed in the EPSG and ISO 19111 standards, also includes a choice of geodetic datum (including an Earth ellipsoid), as different datums will yield different latitude and longitude values for the same location.[3]

The invention of a geographic coordinate system is generally credited to Eratosthenes of Cyrene, who composed his now-lost Geography at the Library of Alexandria in the 3rd century BC.[4] A century later, Hipparchus of Nicaea improved on this system by determining latitude from stellar measurements rather than solar altitude and determining longitude by timings of lunar eclipses, rather than dead reckoning. In the 1st or 2nd century, Marinus of Tyre compiled an extensive gazetteer and mathematically plotted world map using coordinates measured east from a prime meridian at the westernmost known land, designated the Fortunate Isles, off the coast of western Africa around the Canary or Cape Verde Islands, and measured north or south of the island of Rhodes off Asia Minor. Ptolemy credited him with the full adoption of longitude and latitude, rather than measuring latitude in terms of the length of the midsummer day.[5]

Ptolemy's 2nd-century Geography used the same prime meridian but measured latitude from the Equator instead. After their work was translated into Arabic in the 9th century, Al-Khwrizm's Book of the Description of the Earth corrected Marinus' and Ptolemy's errors regarding the length of the Mediterranean Sea,[note 1] causing medieval Arabic cartography to use a prime meridian around 10 east of Ptolemy's line. Mathematical cartography resumed in Europe following Maximus Planudes' recovery of Ptolemy's text a little before 1300; the text was translated into Latin at Florence by Jacopo d'Angelo around 1407. 006ab0faaa

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