• @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    11 month ago

    My bad, should clarify I was referring to this specifically:

    In geology, a continent is defined as “one of Earth’s major landmasses, including both dry land and continental shelves”. The geological continents correspond to seven large areas of continental crust that are found on the tectonic plates, but exclude small continental fragments such as Madagascar that are generally referred to as microcontinents. Continental crust is only known to exist on Earth.

    • @sugar_in_your_tea
      link
      31 month ago

      If we’re talking about tectonic plates, then:

      • Europe is part of Eurasia
      • Arabian peninsula, India, and far east Russia aren’t part of it, but we’d probably include them as subcontintents

      We’d end up with the following continents:

      • N. America (technically includes far east Russia) w/ Caribbean subcontinent
      • S. America
      • Eurasia w/ Indian and Arabian subcontintents
      • Africa w/ Somali subcontinent
      • Australia
      • Antarctica

      Image.

      Honestly, that would be a much more satisfactory definition than the current one, which seems to be “large landmass bigger than Greenland with logical separations when they’re too big.” What I really don’t understand is when people say Europe and Asia are separate, but N. America and S. America are combined, that’s logically inconsistent.