English: Identifier: colliersnewencyc01newy (find matches)
Title: Collier's new encyclopedia : a loose-leaf and self-revising reference work ... with 515 illustrations and ninety-six maps
Year: 1921 (1920s)
Authors:
Subjects: Encyclopedias and dictionaries
Publisher: New York : P. F. Collier
Contributing Library: University of California Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: Internet Archive
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ost exactly one-third of the land surfaceof the globe (32 per cent). Geographi-cally speaking, Europe is a mere ap-pendix to Asia, and no exact geographi-cal delimitation of the two continents ispossible. Peninsulas.—-Asia has one mile of coast-line for every 337 square miles of itsarea; that is, three times less than Eu-rope; besides one-fifth of its shores iswashed by the ice-bound Arctic Ocean(9,900 miles out of 51,000), or by thefoggy and icy Sea of Okhotsk. Its pen-insulas comprise nearly one-fifth of itssurface. Three immense offsets continuethe continent of Asia into more tropicallatitudes, Arabia, India, and the Indo-Chinese peninsula, and some likenessexists between them and the threesouthern peninsulas of Europei, Spain,Italy, and the Balkan peninsula, sur-rounded by its archipelago of hundredsof islands. Asia Minor protrudes be-tween the Black Sea and the Mediter-ranean as a huge mass of table-land,broken by narrow gulfs in its westernparts. In the Pacific are three large
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ASIA 295 ASIA peninsulas, Korea, Kamchatka, and thatof the Tchuktchis. The flat, ever frozen,uninhabitable peninsulas of the ArcticOcean,, Taimyr and Yalmal, could playno part in the growth of civilization. Seas^ and Gulfs.—The early inhabitantsof Asia had no Mediterranean Sea toserve as a highway of communicationbetween the southern peninsulas. Thegulfs which separate them, the ArabianSea and the Bay of Bengal, are wide opendivisions of the Indian Ocean. The RedSea penetrates between Africa andArabia; and only now, since it has beenbrought into communication with theMediterranean by the Suez Canal, hasit become an important channel of traffic.Asias true Mediterranean is on the E.,where several archipelagoes, like so manychains of islands, mark off from theocean the southern and eastern ChinaSeas, whose Gulfs of Siam and Tonkin,and, especially, the Yellow Sea, withthe Gulf of Pechili, penetrate into thecontinent. The Sea of Japan has on itsW. the inhospitable coasts of northernManch
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