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The Continents and Their Areas and Elevations

A continent is defined as a large unbroken land mass completely surrounded by water, although in some cases continents are (or were in part) connected by land bridges. The seven continents are North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia, and Antarctica. The island groups in the Pacific are often called Oceania but this name does not imply that scientists consider them the remains of a continent.

Area Approximate
land area
sq. km
Approximate
land area
sq. mi.
Percentage
of total
land area
Elevation, feet and meters
Highest Lowest
WORLD 148,647,000 57,393,000 100.0% Mt. Everest, Tibet-Nepal, 29,035 ft.
(8,850 m)1
Dead Sea, Israel-Jordan, 1,349 ft. below sea level (–411 m)
AFRICA 30,065,000 11,608,000 20.2 Mt. Kilimanjaro, Tanzania, 19,340 ft. (5,895 m) Lake Assal, Djibouti, 512 ft. below sea level (–156 m)
ANTARCTICA 13,209,000 5,100,000 8.9 Vinson Massif, Ellsworth Mts., 16,066 ft.
(4,897 m)
Lowest land point hidden within Bentley Subglacial Trench2
ASIA (includes the
Middle East)
44,579,000 17,212,000 30.0 Mt. Everest, Tibet-Nepal, 29,035 ft. (8,850 m) Dead Sea, Israel-Jordan, 1,349 ft. below sea level (–411 m)
AUSTRALIA
(includes Oceania)
8,112,000 3,132,000 5.3 Mt. Kosciusko, Australia, 7,310 ft. (2,228 m) Lake Eyre, Australia, 52 ft. below sea level (–12 m)
EUROPE (the Ural Mountains in Russia form the boundary between Europe and Asia) 9,938,000 3,837,000 6.7 Mt. Elbrus, Russia/Georgia, 18,510 ft. (5,642 m) Caspian Sea, Russia/Kazakhstan 92 ft. below sea level (–28 m)
NORTH AMERICA (includes Central America and the
Caribbean)
24,474,000 9,449,000 16.5 Mt. McKinley, Alaska, 20,320 ft.
(6,194 m)
Death Valley, Calif., 282 ft. below sea level (–86 m)
SOUTH AMERICA 17,819,000 6,879,000 12.0 Mt. Aconcagua, Argentina,
22,834 ft.
(6,960 m)
Valdes Peninsula, Argentina 131 ft. below sea level (–40 m)
1. The 1954 elevation of Everest, 29,028 ft. (8,848 m) was revised on Nov. 11, 1999, and now stands at 29,035 ft. (8,850 m).
2. Bentley Subglacial Trench itself (ice, not land) is –8,327 ft. below sea level (–2,538 m).
Source: WorldAtlas.com.

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