ANSWERS: 4
-
Here's a pretty good, thorough answer from http://users.erols.com/jcalder/CONTISLAND.html There is an important point made here that may raise questions in some minds: that Australia is considerably larger than Greenland. On a flat map, they usually look very similar in size, but this is a distortion due to Greenland's proximity to the poles and Australia's proximity to the equator. On a globe, it can be readily seen that the size difference is indeed real. Continent vs. Island Why should Australia be considered a continent and Greenland an island? The answer is not clear-cut, but there are rational reasons behind it. The characteristics of continents are these: Areas of geologically stable continental crust, or cratons, tectonically independent from other continents Biological distinctiveness, with unique animal and plant life Cultural uniqueness Local opinion that they are a separate continent Obviously, the first three are scientific, and the second two are more subjective. Compare Australia and Greenland, the largest island: Tectonic independence from other continents AUSTRALIA YES GREENLAND NO Unique flora and fauna AUSTRALIA YES GREENLAND NO Unique cultures AUSTRALIA YES GREENLAND NO Local opinion AUSTRALIA MIXED GREENLAND ISLAND To elaborate: Australia is separated from all other continents by young oceanic crust. Greenland is geologically part of North America. Australia has highly distinct plants and animals. Greenland's are largely shared with northern North America. Australia is considerably larger than Greenland. If separation is key, then Antarctica should also be considered an island (making Australia second largest). Australia has unique, ancient cultures. Greenland's Arctic cultures, while unique, are part of larger North American Arctic culture. Everyone agrees that everything smaller than Australia is an island. Australians themselves are divided, and often claim that Australia is both the world's largest island and the world's smallest continent. So, there are good reasons to assert that Australia is a continent and not an island. However, it has to be conceded that there can be no definitive answer. The questions only grow more complex when you look at the details: By scientific criteria, Madagascar and several other islands are continents. Europe is really just a series of peninsulas off western Asia. Only culture, tradition, and sense of self gave it continental status. Siberia and Alaska are not part of separate continents geologically. The sea barrier between them is just a happenstance of the current high sea levels of this interglacial period. Africa is solidly joined to southwest Asia, though in the process of rifting away. The Americas are joined by a substantial but recent land bridge. Last modified 8/5/00--------------------------- Copyright 2003 Joshua Calder Contact Joshua Calder at jcalder@erols.com with questions or suggestions.
-
Simply speaking Australia is surrounded by water on all sides while Greenland is attached somewhere to the mainland or at the poles i believ, that is why Australia is an island.
-
population, stable carbohydrate, civilization of the natives and the demand for land.
-
Both are completely surrounded by water so both are islands. But Greenland lacks the size to qualify as a continent.
Copyright 2023, Wired Ivy, LLC

by 