True
True
true
The super continent Pangaea that existed millions of years ago is now broken into many pieces of large land masses, therefore, becoming the continents that we live on today.
Continents are the large land masses that sit atop the Earth's crust, on tectonic plates having lighter material than the ocean plates.There are seven continents. In order of decreasing size they are :AsiaAfricaNorth AmericaSouth AmericaAntarcticaEuropeAustralia (sometimes erroneously referred to as Oceania)The masses of Europe and Asia are linked, and still just barely separated from Africa. North and South America are joined by a narrow isthmus, Panama. The land areas of Earth might be considered large islands in the global ocean.The 7 continents are: North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia and Antarctica. [Sometimes Oceania]
That's really a hard question to answer. Many people will give you the argument that continents are large land masses that have various geographic features, such as jungles, deserts, plains, and so on. Then again, Antarctica is a continent, and it only have one biome, and that's tundra/ice. So in reality, that's a disputed question.
These large landmasses are called "continents".
Large masses of land are called continents.
Large land areas are called continents.
Continents.
continents
continent
glaciers
glaciers
the gravity of large masses. the large masses could be other planets or stars or our sun Their own momentum. other masses only deflect them by changing their momentum.
air masses
Any of the continents are examples of large land masses. One example is Australia with a square area of 7.692 million km².
They are the seven continents: Asia, Africa, Europe, North America, South America, Australia, and Antarctica.
The new speed for the combined masses will be one-half the original velocity of the moving spaceship, since the momentum is applied to a mass twice as large.