• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

How Many Continents Are There? No One Can Seem To Agree

September 18, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

As a young kid, you were no doubt told by your teachers how many continents there are on Earth. However, the answer you were given most likely depends on where (and when) you were taught.

In the US, students are generally told that there are seven continents: North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia, and Antarctica. In Europe, however, it’s more often taught there are only six continents: Europe, Asia, Africa, Antarctica, Australia/Oceania, and America (which is treated as a single continent).

Advertisement

Others would argue there are even fewer continents. Some geographers believe that the distinction between Europe and Asia is arbitrary and primarily based on historical geopolitical distinctions, not physical ones. Simply look at a map and it’s plain to see that Europe and Asia are the same landmass. Furthermore, their histories and cultures have been deeply intertwined for centuries.

Some scholars contend that Europe was an invention of the elites, arrogantly designed to emphasize the exceptional nature of “the West” and its culture. As such, they have argued that Europe and Asia should be treated as a single continent: Eurasia.  

“To imagine Europe and Asia as constituting equivalent ‘continents’ has long been recognized as the ethnocentric cornerstone of a Western, or Euro-American, world view,” Chris Hann, founding Director of the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, wrote in a 2016 paper.

“The amalgam Eurasia corrects this bias by highlighting the intensifying interconnectedness of the entire landmass in recent millennia,” Hann added.

Seven continents world map. Asia, Africa, North and South America, Antarctica, Europe and Australia. Detailed map with shorelines and national borders under Robinson projection on white background.

The seven-continent model most commonly taught in the US.

Image credit: Peter Hermes Furian/Shutterstock.com

Historian Marshall Hodgson went even further, according to Hann, and put forward the case that Europe, Africa, and Asia are all part of one continental complex: Afro-Eurasia. After all, the landmass is completely traversable by land and not broken up by any water (except the Suez Canal in Egypt, which was built by humans in the 19th century).

There is also a five-continent model, as illustrated by the five rings on the Olympic flag, with each circle symbolizing each inhabited continent of the planet: Africa, Asia, America, Europe, and Oceania/Australia. 

To go back a bit, we should define the meaning of the word continent. It stems from the Latin term “terra continens”, meaning continuous land, and is used to refer to large land masses.

It’s often suggested that the continents align with the tectonic plates of Earth, but even this system of categories unearths some problems. Under this definition, Eurasia is a single continent and there are also numerous “minor plates” of significant size that don’t fit in with the model, like the Indian Plate.

Advertisement

According to a definition by the Glossary of Geology cited in a 2017 study: “It is generally agreed that continents have all the following attributes: (1) high elevation relative to regions floored by oceanic crust; (2) a broad range of siliceous igneous, metamorphic, and sedimentary rocks; (3) thicker crust and lower seismic velocity structure than oceanic crustal regions; and (4) well-defined limits around a large enough area to be considered a continent rather than a microcontinent or continental fragment.”

However, the authors added: “To our knowledge, the last point – how ‘major’ a piece of continental crust has to be to be called a continent – is almost never discussed.” 

In other words, even the most scientific of definitions has some degree of subjectivity. Try as we might, it’s extremely hard to divorce the concept of a continent from the sociocultural forces that shape our perception of Earth and our place within it. 

“Nothing, really, determines a continent, except historical convention. A bit of an overstatement but mostly valid,” Dan Montello, a geography professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara, told HowStuffWorks. “Certain factors make a landmass more or less likely to be called a continent at various times in history, by various people, but nothing can be said to determine continentality in a completely principled, nonarbitrary way.”

Advertisement

“There simply is no ‘czar’ or ‘CEO’ of continents or any other ultimate authority, so it is pretentious for anyone to claim they have the authoritative answer,” said Montello.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Harvard University to end investment in fossil fuels
  2. North Korea says call to declare end of Korean War is premature
  3. Asian stocks fall to near 1-year low as oil prices stoke inflation worries
  4. “Unique” Medieval Christian Art Discovered By Accident In Sudan Desert

Source Link: How Many Continents Are There? No One Can Seem To Agree

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • JWST Discovers A Milky Way-Like Spiral Galaxy Where It Shouldn’t Exist
  • World’s Largest Dinosaur Tracksite Has At Least 16,600 Footprints And Sets Many World Records
  • Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Will Make Its Closest Approach To Earth This Month, Just 270 Million Kilometers Away
  • How Does Time Pass On Mars? For The First Time, We Have A Precise Answer
  • Is This How The Voynich Manuscript Was Made? A New Cipher Offers Fascinating Clues
  • An Extremely Rare And Beautiful “Meat-Eating” Plant Has Been Found Miles From Its Known Home
  • Scheerer Phenomenon: Those White Structures You See When You Look At The Sky May Not Be “Floaters”
  • The Science Of Magic At CURIOUS Live: Psychologist Dr Gustav Kuhn On Using Magic To Study The Human Mind
  • Around 5 Percent Of Cancers Are Of “Unknown Primary”. Could A New Blood Test Track Them Down?
  • With Only 5 Years Left In Space, The International Space Station Just Hit A New Milestone
  • 7,000-Year-Old Atacama Mummies May Have Been Created As “Art Therapy”
  • In 1985, A Newborn Underwent Heart Surgery Without Pain Relief Because Doctors Didn’t Think Babies Could Feel Pain
  • Ancient Roman Military Officers Had Pet Monkeys, And The Pet Monkeys Had Pet Piglets
  • Lasting 29 Hours, The World’s Longest Commercial Scheduled Flight Is Set To Take Off This Week
  • What Is Christougenniatikophobia, And What Do I Do About It?
  • Sun’s Ancient Encounter With Two Hot Stars Left A Legacy In The Solar System’s Neighborhood
  • Defiant Stars And Unusual Objects Survive Against The Milky Way’s Supermassive Black Hole
  • A Wobbling Brown Dwarf Might Be A Sign Of The First Discovered “Exomoon” – A Moon Outside The Solar System
  • “Happy Molecule” Precursor Discovered In Extraterrestrial Material For The First Time
  • Why Do Seals Slap Their Belly?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version