Australia has one country on it. Antarctica has zero countries on it. (Several countries claim some portion of Antarctica, but those claims are not internationally recognized.)
Australia and Antarctica each contain fewer than three countries. Australia is home to only one country, which is also named Australia, while Antarctica has no countries but is inhabited by scientists from multiple nations.
There are 195 countries in the world. There are 7 continents: Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Europe, North America, Australia (Oceania), and South America.
The two supercontinents are Laurasia and Gondwana. Laurasia formed in the Northern Hemisphere, while Gondwana formed in the Southern Hemisphere. These supercontinents eventually broke apart to form the continents we see today.
The two continents with the largest land areas are Asia and Africa. Asia is the largest continent, covering around 30% of Earth's land area, while Africa is the second largest continent, covering about 20% of the land area.
Fossil evidence of the same species found on multiple continents. Matching geological formations across continents, such as mountain ranges. Similar rock formations and ages of rocks on different continents. Paleoclimatic evidence, like glacial deposits in areas that are now far from the poles. Fit of continental shelf margins, where coastlines align when continents are pieced together.
One way we know that all the continents were connected at one point is through evidence of similar rock formations, fossils, and mountain ranges across different continents, indicating they were once part of a single landmass known as Pangaea.
There are 195 countries in the world. There are 7 continents: Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Europe, North America, Australia (Oceania), and South America.
because it was fourght in countries from 3 different continents
because it was fourght in countries from 3 different continents
1.Asia 2.Africa
1.Asia 2.Africa
The two continents with the largest land areas are Asia and Africa. Asia is the largest continent, covering around 30% of Earth's land area, while Africa is the second largest continent, covering about 20% of the land area.
The two supercontinents are Laurasia and Gondwana. Laurasia formed in the Northern Hemisphere, while Gondwana formed in the Southern Hemisphere. These supercontinents eventually broke apart to form the continents we see today.
clue less
clue less
Less than 1? Perhaps you are asking about counties, not countries.
Fossil evidence of the same species found on multiple continents. Matching geological formations across continents, such as mountain ranges. Similar rock formations and ages of rocks on different continents. Paleoclimatic evidence, like glacial deposits in areas that are now far from the poles. Fit of continental shelf margins, where coastlines align when continents are pieced together.
There are two main evidences for this: 1. The continents fit together like a puzzle 2. There are both extant and extinct animal and plant species present on several continents that are not connected