We often hear this example of coordinate singularity. We can describe the 3D Euclidean space using rectangular or spherical coordinates. But in the spherical coordinate, the north pole $(r,\theta=0, \phi)$ is a coordinate singularity because one point here corresponds to infinitely many values of $\phi$.
In the Schwarzschild metric, $$ ds^2=-(1-\frac{2M}{r})dt^2+\frac{dr^2}{(1-\frac{2M}{r})}+r^2d\Omega^2, $$
we know that $r=2M$ is a coordinate singularity.
I have two questions.
(1).The metric determinant is $g=r^4\sin^2\theta$, which is not zero or divergent at $r=2M$. Can we ascertain a coordinate singularity only on the basis of the divergence of some metric component?
(2). According to the metric determinant, $g=0$ at $\theta=0$. Why is $\theta=0$ not a coordinate singularity as is shown in the above example?