Europe and Asia, Asia and Africa, North America and South America. Antarctica and Australia, the other two continents are technically islands.
Asia and Europe are the two continents that are not separated by a body of water. They are connected by land and are often referred to as a single continent called Eurasia.
Europe and Asia
Asia and Europe are the two continents that are not separated by a body of water. They are connected by land, with boundaries that have been traditionally defined based on cultural and historical differences rather than geographical separation by a body of water.
The Pacific Ocean is the largest and deepest ocean on Earth, and it is the only body of water that touches all seven continents through its coasts.
The two continents that Pangaea separated into are Laurasia in the northern hemisphere and Gondwana in the southern hemisphere.
Europe and Asia
Asia and Europe are the two continents that are not separated by a body of water. They are connected by land, with boundaries that have been traditionally defined based on cultural and historical differences rather than geographical separation by a body of water.
Europe and Asia are on the same land mass, not separated land masses, so therefore these cannot be continents. A continent is a body of land separated by water. Europe nor Asia are separated by water.
The Earth is separated into continents because water is covering the rest of Earth's surface so there are gaps between land.
Europe and Asia
No, Pangaea separated into two main supercontinents called Laurasia and Gondwana. These two supercontinents eventually broke apart to form the continents we have today.
The continents began to separate around 200 million years ago during the breakup of the supercontinent Pangaea. This process led to the formation of the current continents and their modern configurations.
The Pacific Ocean is the largest and deepest ocean on Earth, and it is the only body of water that touches all seven continents through its coasts.
Continental drift.
North America and South America are separated by the Andes Mountain range. Europe and Asia are separated by the Ural Mountains.
No one person achieved this. The continents separated themselves (and still move today); it's plate tectonics.
the world.