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Africa used to be known as the Dark Continent. This is because nothing was known about the interior of Africa up until about the mid 1800s. So to the outside world, interior Africa was known as dark and mysterious.
Africa is sometimes referred to as the "dark continent." This term was used historically to symbolize the unknown and mysterious nature of Africa to Europeans.
People from Europe, Australia, and the Americas used to call Africa the "dark continent." There were two reasons. One, was that it was very difficult for explorers who went there, and many of them died of illnesses such as yellow fever and malaria. Second, was because most of the continent was unknown as a result of that difficulty in exploration.
The dark continent was Africa and it was first used by Native Americans. It was named by the suckish nizns. And mauro, peter and alec were loved by the nizns
Africa
Africa, the Dark Continent. A romantic name for an unknown and under explored region of the world to the Europeans of the 19th century. In the late 1700's and early 1800's many early explorers set off to chart and discover the unknown continent. At that time most of the coast line of the continent was know and mapped, but very few (Europeans) had any idea what lay much further and a few kilometers inland. Early explorations of the continent centered around issues such as the source if the Nile River, people knew that it was a great river and had given birth to the ancient Egyptian civilization, but very little else. The other obvious issue was where the local (coastal) traders obtained their supplies of ivory, gold, minerals and slaves that they bartered at the major sea ports along the coast. Added to that were stories of fabulosly rich and lost mines and lost civilizations. Many (mostly English) explorers set off to explore the "Dark Continent", people like Livingstone and Stanley were funded privately, as well as by newspapers and societies (such as the Geographical Society of London) who then used their exploits to sell newspapers and increase the storehouse of geographical knowledge of an expanding world.
As of yet, way too little is known about dark matter to speculate about any practical uses.
Greenwich is not a continent, it is a town in London, England. It is known for being the location of the Prime Meridian and Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), used as a reference point for timekeeping around the world.
That used to be the name for Africa.
No, the Arctic is not a continent. The Arctic used to be a continent, however, it split. Today, the Arctic is an ocean, named for the continent that used to be where it lies today, at the northern portion of the Earth.
The first continent wasn't any of the continents we have today. It was a lot of the continents that we know now, all joined together. It is known as Gondwala. The continent eventually broke up into the present day continents, eg. the east coast of South America used to fit into the west coast of Africa.
"Dark horse" is a phrase used to describe a person or thing about which very little is known. Like in politics - a dark horse candidate would be someone who is not well-known in political circles.