Nope, Illinois is north of the 40 degrees latitude line. So if you're looking for sunshine and warm weather, you might want to head a bit further south, honey.
The latitude and longitude of Illinois' state capital, Springfield, is approximately 39.7817° N, 89.6501° W.
South Dakota
No, not the entire state of Arkansas lies south of forty degrees latitude. The northern border of Arkansas is just above this line.
victoria
There is no point in the USA at a latitude that is 40 degrees south of any point in Louisiana.
Yes and no. Part is and the rest isn't.40 degrees latitude runs across the state, roughly near Quincy, Petersburg, Springfield, Decatur, Monticello, Champaign, and Danville. Everything in Illinois below that line is south of 40 degrees north latitude. The rest is north of 40.
The only state located entirely south of 25 N is Hawaii, and the onlyother state with any territory south of that latitude is Florida.
Are you talking about the Mississippi River ? Then I think it would be the bank ofthe river, not the coast. Oceans have coasts, lakes have shores, and rivers havebanks.The states that are completely or partly south of 40° north latitude and lie alongthe banks of the Mississippi River are:-- Missouri-- Illinois-- Kentucky-- Arkansas-- Tennessee-- Louisiana-- Mississippi
40 degrees due north of Tennessee is somewhere on pack ice on Ellesmere Island in Nunavut. 40 degrees due south of Tennessee puts you in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Peru. The 40th parallel of north latitude passes through Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, but not through Tennessee. It's really a mystery what the question is asking for.
No, Tennessee straddles the 35-36 degrees north latitude line, which means parts of it lie below the 40 degrees north latitude line.
Hawaii is completely south of 25° N, and about 2/3 of the Florida Keys are too. No other state has any of its territory at or south of that latitude.
Totally not. Every point in Iowa is north of 40° north latitude.