180th meridian


The 180th meridian or antimeridian is the meridian 180° both east and west of the Prime Meridian, with which it forms a great circle dividing the earth into the Western and Eastern Hemispheres. It is common to both east longitude and west longitude. It mostly passes through the open waters of the Pacific Ocean, but passes across land in Russia, Fiji and Antarctica. This meridian is used as the basis for the International Date Line, but the latter deviates from it to maintain date consistency within the territories of Russia, the United States, Kiribati, Fiji and New Zealand.
Starting at the North Pole and heading south to the South Pole, the 180th meridian passes through:
Co-ordinates
Country, territory or seaNotes
Arctic Ocean
Chukotka Autonomous OkrugWrangel Island
Chukchi Sea
Chukotka Autonomous Okrug
Bering Sea
Amchitka PassPassing just east of Semisopochnoi Island, Alaska,
Pacific OceanPassing just east of Nukulaelae atoll,
Passing just west of the island of Cikobia,
Islands of Vanua Levu, Rabi, and Taveuni
Pacific OceanPassing just east of the island of Moala,
Passing just west of the island of Totoya,
Passing just east of the island of Matuku,
Southern Ocean
AntarcticaRoss Dependency, claimed by

, Fiji
The meridian also passes between :
The only place where roads cross this meridian, and where there are buildings very close to it, is in Fiji.

Software representation problems

Many geographic software libraries or data formats project the world to a rectangle; very often this rectangle is split exactly at the 180th meridian. This often makes it non-trivial to do simple tasks over the 180th meridian. Some examples: