No. Australia is its own continent. Oceania, by most geographical definitions, is not a continent. A continent is a land mass. Oceania is not a land mass. Oceania is merely a general region, rather obscurely defined as covering parts of the southern Pacific, including Australia and New Zealand.
i have no idea,, thats what im trying to figure out!!
Oceania is not a continent, but a region. It comprises the continent of Australia, the islands of New Zealand and New Guinea, and several small Pacific islands and territories. There remains dispute over whether or not Oceania is a continent. A continent is theoretically defined as a land mass - which Oceania is not.
It is the land under Asia
Europe: Vatican City 0.44 km <0.01 % of world's land mass Australia & Oceania: Nauru 21 km <0.01 % of world's land mass North America: Saint Kitts and Nevis 261 km <0.01 % of world's land mass Asia: Maldives 298 km <0.01 % of world's land mass Africa: Seychelles 455 km <0.01 % of world's land mass South America: Suriname 163,820 km 0.11 % of world's land mass Antarctica: Antarctica unknown
Land bridges
because they are nothing to concur the all land
Oceania or Australia depending on what people prefer to call it.
aquatic land mammals pigs goats lizards
The sort of islands that are land surrounded by water.
If your definition of Oceania includes Australia, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea as well as the Pacific Islands, Oceania's land covers 8,536,716 square kilometres. Earth's land covers 148,940,000 square kilometres. Therefore, (8,536,716/148,940,000)x100 = 5.73%. I hope this has helped.
Europe is next to smallest by land area. The only smaller continent is Oceania.