North and South America.
No, there are no continents that span all four hemispheres (Northern, Southern, Eastern, and Western). The continents are divided in a way that they are located in at least two hemispheres.
Europe, Africa, and Antarctica are all both in the Eastern and Western Hemispheres. Also, North America. (A tiny part of Alaska is in the Eastern hemisphere.)
Africa and Europe are the only continents that appear in both the eastern and western hemispheres. These continents are separated by the Prime Meridian, which runs through Greenwich, London.
North America is in the Northern and Western hemispheres. Australia is in Southern and Eastern hemispheres. Asia is in the Northern and Eastern hemispheres.
South America and Africa
Yes. Either in Northern or Southern And Either in Eastern or Western
First of all, there are two hemispheres, longitudinally; the northern and the southern hemispheres. Secondly, there are two hemispheres, latitudinally; the eastern and western hemispheres. Given the above, one could say that South America occupies parts of the northern, southern and western hemispheres, and that Africa and Asia occupy parts of the northern, southern and eastern hemispheres.
The two continents that show up partially in both the eastern and western hemispheres is Africa and Antarctica. Europe also shows up in both hemispheres.
Three continents span both the Western and Eastern Hemispheres: Europe, Africa, and Antarctica.
North America is solely in the Northern and Western Hemispheres. Australia is solely in the Southern and Eastern Hemispheres.
Only Africa has parts laying in the Eastern, Western, Northern and Southern Hemispheres, unless one considers the Indonesian islands part of Asia, in which case Asia does as well.
Europe, Antarctica and Africa: both Western and Eastern. South America, Asia and Africa: both Southern and Northern. Only includes contrasting hemispheres.