The islands of New Zealand are about 2500km from the continent of Australia.
No New Zealand is not part of the Australian continent. New Zealand is geographically and physically distant from Australia and is not on a continent. In geographic terms it is an isolated nation and island group.
New Zealand, along with the pacific islands and Australia, is part of the continent australasia, or australia, as some people call it.
New Zealand is geographically associated with the continent of Australia. While it is not on the Australian continent landmass itself, New Zealand is part of the wider region known as Australasia, which includes Australia, New Zealand, and surrounding islands.
James Cook proved that New Zealand was not part of Australia. Abel Tasman had originally believed they were part of the same continent.
Australia is a continent located in between New Zealand and Indonesia
New Zealand is not in a continent: it is an island country. Australia is a nation and a continent, but the continent of Australia does not incorporate New Zealand. New Zealand is part of the mostly submerged continent Zealandia, which is not commonly recognised as one of the continents of the world, precisely because it is submerged. The continent of Australia is a recognised continent. The region including Australia and New Zealand is sometimes referred to as "Oceania", but Oceania is geographically and politically not a continent.
No, Oceania is not a continent that includes Australia. Oceania is a region that includes Australia, New Zealand, and various Pacific islands, but it is not considered a continent. Australia is its own continent.
New Zealand Answer: Australia occupies the entire continent. New Zealand is a separate country, not part of Australia.
New Zealand is located in the continent of Oceania.
Australia and New Zealand form the Australasian continent.
New Zealand is an Island Nation and not a part of any continent.