There are seven continents on Earth — or so we learned in school. But these designations are more complex than they seem, and different scientists have different views on how continents should be grouped.
How many continents are there? The seven continents are Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Europe, North America, Oceania and South America, but some experts argue that there could be less. There's a "question as to what exactly defines each continent," said BBC Science Focus.
While the U.S. teaches that there are seven continents, Europe teaches that there are only six, with North and South America counting as one consolidated America. Some combine Europe and Asia into Eurasia since the two are connected by land. Another model denotes Africa, Asia and Europe as one continent, Afro-Eurasia, because the "landmass is completely traversable by land and not broken up by any water," said IFL Science.
A continent is "typically defined as being a large continuous mass of land, loosely correlating with the positions of the tectonic plates," said Science Focus. One recent study published in the journal Gondwana Research argued, controversially, that North America and Europe are one continent because "North America and Eurasian tectonic plates have not yet actually broken apart," said Jordan Phethean, the lead author of the study, to Earth.com. The evidence comes down to Iceland and the Greenland-Iceland-Faroe Ridge, which, according to recent findings, "contains geological fragments from both European and North American tectonic plates," said Earth.com, suggesting the regions are interconnected parts of a larger whole.
What makes a continent? Continents are difficult to define because the Earth is often changing. Originally, Earth contained one landmass known as Pangea, which eventually broke apart into separate masses.
"Plate tectonics and the Pangea supercontinent suggest that continents move and break up over periods of time due to convection from the decay of radioactive elements in the mantle," said Science Focus. The current continents are also not the ones that always existed. For example, scientists only recently mapped the completely submerged microcontinent of Zealandia. |