This is basically talking about the loudness (I'll call it simply 'the volume' from here on). Speakers will output different volumes than the source specifies depending on the pitch, due to the limits of physics. So if you have a high pitch sound at say 10Khz and another sound at 2Khz, the CD may say that they should be the same volume, the amplifier puts out the same volume, but the speaker plays one louder than the other. How well the speaker is able to output all pitches at the same volume is a major part of what makes a good speaker.
Your main speakers are capable of outputing something from 80 Hz to 24 kHz. It's loudest in the middle, and quieter at the ends. So if you start in the middle, by the time you go down to 100Hz, it's half as loud. By 79Hz you can't hear it anymore. Same thing as you go up - at 20Khz it's half the volume and by 24Khz it's not making sound at all (you can't hear that high anyway).
The subwoofer has its own curve too, and since the top end of the subwoofer overlaps with the bottom end of the other speakers, you get a relatively flat volume from 35Hz to 20Khz. Put your crossover wherever it sounds the best in the 100Hz to 180Hz range. 140Hz is right in the middle if you just want a number.