用英语介绍世界五大洲

作者&投稿:封怪 (若有异议请与网页底部的电邮联系)
世界上的五大洲用英语怎么说??~

Europe
欧洲
Asia
亚洲
Africa
非洲
Australia
澳洲
America
美洲
Antarctic
南极洲
Arctic
北极洲

亚洲 Asia
欧洲 Europe
非洲 Africa
北美洲 North America
南美洲 South America
大洋州 Oceania
南极洲 Antarctica

太平洋 Pacific Ocean
大西洋 Altantic Ocean
北冰洋 Arctic Ocean
印度洋 Indian Ocean

Asia
The largest of the world's continents. With its peninsular extension, commonly called the continent of Europe, it is the major portion of the broad east-west extent of the Northern Hemisphere land masses. In many ways Asia is more a cultural concept than a physical entity. There is no logical physical separation between Asia and Europe, and even Africa is separated from Asia merely by the width of the Suez Canal. For convenience, however, the Eurasian land mass is considered to be divided by the Ural Mountains into Europe in the west and Asia in the east. Thus restricted, Asia has an area of about 17,700,000 mi2 (45,800,000 km2), about one-third of the land area of the Earth. In the north, Siberia reaches past the 80th latitude. Southward, India and Sri Lanka (Ceylon) reach nearer than 10°N of the Equator, while the Indonesian islands extend more than 10°S of the Equator. The continental heart of Asia is more than 2000 mi (3200 km) from the nearest ocean. See also Continent; Europe.

Topography

In the topographic framework of Asia, the great mountain systems are the most impressive features. From the central knot of the mighty Pamirs and Kopet Dagh in the heart of the continent originate chains radiating in several directions. In the Peter the First Range there are such heights as Qullai Ismoili Somoni, 24,584 ft (7493 m), and Lenin Peak, 23,377 ft (7125 m), above sea level. Running westward through Afghanistan is the Hindu Kush, reaching elevations over 20,000 ft (6100 m). The mountain trendline continues, after a jog northwestward, in the Elburz of northern Iran and thence in the Armenian highlands and the Caucasus, each with elevations reaching 18,000 ft (5500 m), decreasing thereafter to the Pontus and Taurus ranges of northern and southern Turkey. In western and southern Iran are the massive Zagros and Makran ranges.

Southeastward from the Pamir knot run the three most imposing mountain chains on Earth: the Karakorum, which continues the line of the Hindu Kush eastward in an arc convex to the north; the Himalaya in an arc convex to the south; and the shorter Trans-Himalaya, or Nyen-chen Tangla, north of the Himalaya, with higher average elevations but peaks of lesser height. In all of these, the average elevations exceed 4 mi (6400 m), with several scores of peaks reaching a height in excess of 25,000 ft (7600 m) above sea level. Everest, 29,141 ft (8882 m), and Kinchinjunga, 28,146 ft (8579 m), lie in the Himalaya, while the peak designated as K2, 28,250 ft (8611 m), rises in the Karakorum.

In eastern Tibet the Himalaya and Nyen-chen Tangla bend sharply toward the south, and the former is cut through by the gorge of the Brahmaputra River. From the bend zone, great ridges divided by deep gorges run south to form the Burma-China frontiers and the mountain backbones of the Malay peninsula and Vietnam. The Nan-ling system of south China diverges eastward to divide the Yang-tzu (Yangtze) from the Hsi (Si) drainage.

From the western Himalaya, the 11,000-ft (3400-m) Sulaiman Range runs south and, together with the Kirthar Range, divides West Pakistan from Afghanistan.

Beginning at heights over 20,000 ft (6100 m) and branching off from the Karakorum south of Kashgar, the Kuen-lun Mountains run eastward across western China. Genetically they form the longest mountain system of China. With their eastward extensions in the 12,000 ft (3700 m) Ch'in-ling and the lesser Ta-pieh mountains and Huai-yang hills, they reach almost to the Pacific. Together with the northeastward arc of the Altyn Tagh and the Nan Shan branching from it, the Kuen-lun forms the northern wall of the Tibetan plateau. Near the eastern end of the Kuen-lun proper lie the Amne Machin Mountains, with peaks up to 25,000 ft (7600 m) in elevation.

Northeastward of the Pamir knot runs the east-west oriented Tien Shan, over 1000 mi (1600 km) long and maintaining heights of 18,000–20,000 ft (5500–6100 m) over much of its length. Roughly parallel and trending east and west is a series of great ranges to its north, with mutual connections in the west. These include the Altai-Sayan, the Tannu Ola, and the Kentei, which form natural boundaries for Outer Mongolia. They continue the systems of young mountains crossing central Asia; farther northeast, they extend further in the Stanovoi Mountains of Eastern Siberia.

The Asian plateaus are in various stages of erosion and thus present a great variety of landscapes. The Tibetan plateau is a prime example. The western half, because of little rainfall, exhibits a rolling topography with relatively slight local relief except where mountain chains cross it; it is a land of internal drainage basins. Average elevations are over 16,000 ft (4900 m). The eastern half is humid or subhumid and is cut by numerous rivers, producing deep canyons and great ridges. In contrast to this is the Mongolian plateau. This plateau consists mostly of vast, rather level plains 3000–5000 ft (900–1500 m) high, surmounted in places by mountains, and containing broad, shallow basins divided by land swells of low elevation.

Other major topographic units of Asia are blocs of hill lands. Most of southern China and much of southeastern Asia comprise hills which may be roughly defined as slope lands with local relief under 1000–1500 ft (300–450 m) although in absolute elevation they may rise many thousands of feet above sea level. Hilly lands are found to predominate in the northern part of the Indian peninsula and along both flanks of the Indian plateau, where they are called ghats. In southern India are the Nilgiri and Cardomom hills, rising to mountainous elevations of 8000 ft (2400 m). Many parts of different plateaus have hilly regions where erosion has produced uneven local relief, as in the Shan or North Vietnam plateau. Hills are prominent features of southwestern Asia, including eastern Mediterranean regions, such as Israel, Syria, and Lebanon.

The most significant topographic units of Asia are the great alluvial plains and river deltas. The gross drainage pattern of Asia is radial; the rivers flow from the highlands in the heart of the continent and run outward in all directions. Only in the south, east, and north sectors of the continent do the rivers reach the sea. Flowing into the peripheral seas of the Pacific are such mighty rivers as the Mekong, the Hsi, the Yang-tzu, the Huai, the Yellow, and the Amur, each building large, heavily populated plains and, with the exception of the Amur, densely settled deltas. The Yellow Plain (North China Plain), with some 125,000 mi2 (324,000 km2) of area, and the Yangtzu Plain, with about 75,000 mi2 (194,000 km2), are among the most extensive alluvial plains of the Earth. In the shallow South China, East China, and Yellow seas, the deltas of the first five rivers mentioned above are pushing steadily seaward.

Important sectors of Asia, containing some 200,000,000 people, are completely insular. The most important are the Japanese, Philippine, and Indonesian islands and Taiwan. Almost all of Asia's islands lie in great volcanic arcs bounding large seas off the continent's Pacific coast. At least 160 active volcanoes are found here and in Kamchatka. Few islands lie along the Asiatic coasts of the Indian Ocean, although the Sunda chain of Indonesia has perhaps more of a claim to Indian Ocean frontage than to Pacific frontage. Sri Lanka is the only significant island in the northern part of the Indian Ocean west of Sumatra. In the Persian Gulf off the north coast of Arabia lies the small island Bahrein.

Few islands lie off the alluviated coastlands of northern Siberia. Some moderately large ones are included in the barren and rocky Severnaya Zemlya group, the New Siberian Islands, and Wrangel Island. The Commander Islands and Karaginski Island lie in the Bering Sea only a short distance from the Aleutians.

Climates

Five major climatic types may be distinguished in the Asian region: (1) the monsoonal system of eastern Asia, (2) the monsoonal system of southern Asia, (3) the equatorial regions of southeastern Asia and their extension into the Southern Hemisphere as they are influenced by the Australian monsoon, (4) the winter rainfall areas of southwestern Asia, and (5) the cyclonic and convectional storm systems of central and northern Asia.

Fundamental to understanding the climates of Asia are the vastness of the unbroken landmass and the long latitudinal stretch from the polar realm to south of the Equator. These are responsible for the great temperature and humidity extremes that occur. The greatest ranges of temperatures in the world have been recorded in interior Asia. Continentality, therefore, is the outstanding feature of climates of interior Asia. In coastal and insular areas of east Asia, however, winds moving over the warm, northward-flowing Japan Current and the western Pacific waters moderate the coastland and island climates. See also Monsoon meteorology.

The driest portions of Asia include the vast areas of southern Mongolia, Hsin-chiang, former Soviet Central Asia, and southwestern Asia. Except for small, favored mountain areas, most of this region from the Gobi to the Red Sea gets less than 10 in. (25 cm) of precipitation per year. With the exception of southern Arabia, which is subtropical desert, these are mid-latitude desert and dry steppe regions. Favored with higher rainfall are the Yemen Mountains and the coastal mountains of Turkey, together with Lebanon, Syria, and northern Israel. The highlands of Armenia and the Elburz of Iran are favored also with more abundant rainfall, which may range from 25 to 50 in. (64 to 127 cm) or more per year.

The northeastern Siberian mountains and the Arctic coastal lands also receive meager rainfall, less than 8 in. (20 cm), but are not dry because evaporation is low and the water table is high. Most of Siberia has permafrost below a few feet of surface soil, so that rainwater does not filter far down into the earth. Between the arid belt of central Asia and the northeast Siberian low-precipitation zone, the annual rainfall ranges between 10 and 18 in. (25 and 45 cm).

In eastern Asia the precipitation increases in a southeasterly direction from interior Asia to the coast. The annual maximum seldom exceeds 80 in. (203 cm) in the wetter southeast coastal regions, whereas this drops to less than 30 in. (76 cm) in the North China Plain and less than 15 in. (38 cm) at the Great Wall. In some mountainous parts of Japan and Taiwan, the yearly average may be more than 100 in. (254 cm).

In the Indian subcontinent rainfall is heaviest along the western plateau fringe and in East Bengal, where it may average over 100 in. (254 cm) per year. The interior of the peninsula is relatively dry. Northwestern India and Pakistan share the drought of southwestern Asia. With the exception of the extreme north, Ceylon generally has abundant rainfall.

Southeastern Asia has the heaviest rainfall of the entire Asiatic region. The mainland mountains facing the southwest summer monsoon crossing the Bay of Bengal, and parts of the Vietnamese and Laotian cordilleras facing the humidified northeast winter monsoons of eastern Asia, regularly get average rainfalls of 120–150 in. (305–381 cm) or even more. Equally heavy rainfalls occur in the southwestern half of Sumatra, southwestern Java, the northwestern half of Borneo, and the Pacific fringe of the Philippine Islands. With a few small exceptions, southeastern Asia has no areas that are subject to severe drought.

Vegetation

Asia's vegetation belts and zones follow, in general, the climatic patterns from desert lands through tropical to Arctic margins.

A wide belt of tundra made irregular by topography occupies the entire Arctic lowland of Siberia with widths varying from 250 to 500 mi (400 to 800 km) north and south. It is widest in the extreme northeast and it extends southward and inland with higher elevations. The frozen subsoil permits the growth of little more than mosses, lichens, dwarfed trees, and scrub. See also Permafrost; Tundra.

The largest unbroken expanse of forest in the world is the Siberian taiga, a dominantly coniferous forest of larches, spruce, fir, and pines, with such deciduous trees as birch and aspen occurring intermixed with the conifers or taking over as a secondary growth in burnt-over areas. The width of this belt in Siberia is more than 1000 mi (1600 km) and it stretches about 4000 mi (6400 km) from the Sea of Okhotsk to the Urals.

Various admixtures of coniferous and deciduous trees compose the vegetation of mid-latitude mixed forests. In the west Siberian plain there is a narrow zone of mixed taiga and deciduous forests including oaks, maples, ash, and lindens. This zone, with a width of 50–100 mi (80–160 km), lies somewhat south of the parallel of 60°N and fades into the steppelands that form the great spring-wheat region of Siberia. Mixed midlatitude deciduous and coniferous forest areas of a similar type occupy most of Korea, the northern half of Honshu in Japan, and the hill lands surrounding the Yellow Plain, as well as the Ch'in-ling Mountains. In southern Asia these forests are found chiefly in a narrow belt of mountain land in the outer ranges of the Himalaya. The remaining areas of these mixed forests run from the Elburz Mountains through the Armenian highlands and the Black Sea fringe of Turkey to the Aegean coast, and in southwestern Asia in the Elburz of northern Iran.

From the mixed and deciduous forests of the west Siberian plain southward, an increasingly dry steppeland is encountered. It extends for 400–500 mi (640–800 km) in a belt about 1000 mi (1600 km) long between the Urals and the Altai-Sayan and associated uplands. The northern half of this belt with its higher annual precipitation of 12–16 in. (30–40 cm) is the agricultural heart of the plain. The southern part gradually changes to desert steppe and then to desert along about the 50th parallel. Eastward of Lake Baikal a broadened steppe zone occupies the Trans-Baikal region extending southward to the Gobi Desert of southern Mongolia and eastward to the Great Hsing-an Mountains, where the zone, about 200 mi (320 km) wide, runs southward in Inner Mongolia. The steppe zone in Inner Mongolia widens with the increasing moisture south of the Great Wall to include most of China's loess plateau. Grasses also form the natural vegetation of the Manchurian plain, with tall grass in the eastern portion thinning out to short-grass steppe in the Hsing-an Mountain flanks. The Gobi Desert is flanked by steppelands to its north, east, and south, as well as by mountain steppe zones in the eastern Altai and eastern T'ien Shan.

Mixed evergreen forests appear to be limited mostly to interior southern China and to Japan from the Kwanto Plain southward, South of the Yang-tzu Valley, this forest type extends from the coast at Shanghai to the gorge lands of eastern Tibet. In Asia the characteristic trees of the mixed forest include broad-leafed evergreen trees such as banyans and camphor, and coniferous trees such as pines, cedars, and cypresses, as well as varieties of bamboo.

Tropical and subtropical rainforest is restricted to warm or hot regions of southern and southeastern Asia which get ample rainfall the year round or get so much rain during a large part of the year that a high groundwater table is maintained during the short dry season. The subtropical sectors are found along the southeastern China coast, in Taiwan, and in northern Burma; they merge with the tropical rainforest farther south, where rainfall and temperature increase. See also Rainforest.

Monsoon tropical deciduous forests comprise the tropical parts of Asia which have a moderately high rainfall but a long dry season (usually in the low-sun period or winter). These forests consist mostly of mixed species, but sometimes a single species becomes dominant as a result of selection from frequent burnings.

A large region of savanna grassland surrounds the Thar Desert of northwestern India and occupies most of the Indus Valley, the Punjab, and the Kathiawar peninsula. Much of the drier interior peninsular Deccan of India also has this as a natural vegetation. Other Asian regions with similar cover are found in Yemen and the region in southeastern Arabia from Oman as far westward as the Qatar peninsula; and similar vegetation extends over the Korat plateau of Thailand, lower Thailand west of Bangkok, southern Cambodia, and small areas in interior Borneo and the Philippines. See also Savanna.

Immense areas of central and southwestern Asia have little or no vegetative cover, and bare rock alternates with sand veneering. In places shifting sand dunes are formed. Although the deserts are not necessarily lifeless, the vegetation is so widely spaced that much bare ground is exposed. The tropical desert areas generally receive their meager rainfall in torrential downpours on rare occasions. After such rains numerous herbs may spring to life and flower, while the bunch grass here and there may become green for a short season.

亚洲~Asia
美洲~America
欧洲~Europe
非洲~Africa
大洋洲~Oceania
南极洲~Antarctica


五大洲英语怎么说
亚洲 Asia 欧洲 Europe 大洋洲 Oceania 非洲 Africa 美洲 America 问题三:世界上的五大洲用英语怎么说?? Europe 欧洲 Asia 亚洲 Africa非洲 Australia 澳洲 America 美洲 Antarctic 南极洲 Arctic 北极洲 问题四:五大洲四大洋用英语分别怎么说?! 太平洋Pacific Ocean 印度洋Indian Ocean 大西洋...

世界七大洲五大洋的英文名称是什么?
世界七大洲的英文名称如下: 1、亚洲的英文名称是Asia。 2、欧洲的英文名称是Europe。 3、非洲的英文名称是Africa。 4、拉丁美洲的英文名称是Latin America。 5、北美洲的英文名称是North America。 6、大洋洲的英文名称是Oceania。 7、南极洲的英文名称是Antarctica 。 世界五大洋的英文名称如下: 1、大西洋的英文...

五大洲四大洋 翻译成英语
太平洋Pacific Ocean 印度洋Indian Ocean 大西洋Atlantic ocean 北冰洋the Arctic Ocean 亚洲Asia 非洲Africa 欧洲Europe 南极洲Antarctica 北美洲North America 南美洲South America或者Latin America 大洋洲Oceania

五大洲四大洋的英语怎么说
The world's vast and diverse waters are divided into five major continents and four principal oceans, each with their unique names in English.Firstly, the Pacific Ocean, often referred to simply as "Pacifical Ocean," sprawls across a vast expanse, connecting the western coasts of ...

五大洲四大洋的英语怎么说
五大洲四大洋:Five continents and four oceans

五大洲的英文分别怎么说?
五大洲英文如下:亚洲 Asia; 非洲 Africa; 拉丁美洲 Latin America; 北美洲 North America; 欧洲 Europe; 澳洲 Australia; 南极洲 Antarctica。

世界上七大洲的英语分别是哪些?
世界七大洲的英文名称如下:1、亚洲的英文名称是Asia。2、欧洲的英文名称是Europe。3、非洲的英文名称是Africa。4、拉丁美洲的英文名称是Latin America。5、北美洲的英文名称是North America。6、大洋洲的英文名称是Oceania。7、南极洲的英文名称是Antarctica 。世界五大洋的英文名称如下:1、大西洋的英文...

世界上的五大洲用英语怎么说??
Europe 欧洲 Asia 亚洲 Africa 非洲 Australia 澳洲 America 美洲 Antarctic 南极洲 Arctic 北极洲

外研社英语英语选修8 课文翻译
总面积约1400万万平方公里南极周围的,是世界上第五大洲。高山,反式南极范围从东到西,运行,减少在欧洲大陆的两个。也有火山,但他们不是很积极。南极洲拥有世界90%的“年代冰,大部分淡水(70%)是在一个冰冻的状态,当然。98%的表面覆盖永久在冰帽。平均而言它是两公里厚的,但在一些地方它达到五公里厚。受地球...

五大洲的英语单词分别是什么亚洲,非洲,欧洲,美洲
亚洲、欧洲、美洲、非洲、大洋州。其中最大的是亚洲、最小的是大洋州。美洲分成两个州,分别是北美洲和南美洲,再加上南极洲就成为令一种概念的七大洲了

涟源市19331845716: 用英语介绍世界五大洲要介绍每个洲的一个国家.说出特色或几个景点阅读时间至少5分钟 -
驹泼胆康:[答案] Asia The largest of the world's continents. With its peninsular extension, commonly called the continent of Europe, it is the major portion of the broad east-west extent of the Northern Hemisphere land masses. In many ways Asia is more a cultural concept...

涟源市19331845716: 世界上的五大洲用英语怎么说? -
驹泼胆康:[答案] Europe 欧洲 Asia 亚洲 Africa 非洲 Australia 澳洲 America 美洲 Antarctic 南极洲 Arctic 北极洲

涟源市19331845716: 五大洲的英文分别怎么说? -
驹泼胆康:[答案] 亚洲,欧洲,美洲,非洲,大洋洲 Asia ,Europe ,America,Africa ,Oceania 其中美洲(America)包括北美洲(North America)和南美洲(South America).

涟源市19331845716: 五大洲的英文怎么说 -
驹泼胆康:[答案] 地理学上将地球大陆分为七大洲,即亚洲、欧洲、非洲、北美洲、南美洲、大洋洲和南极洲.但由于南极洲无人居住,南北美洲常合称美洲,所以又有五大洲的说法.如奥运会的五环旗就是由五环分别代表五大洲.如今的五大洲就是亚洲、欧洲、大洋洲...

涟源市19331845716: 五大洲的英语单词分别是什么亚洲,非洲,欧洲,美洲 -
驹泼胆康: 亚洲、欧洲、美洲、非洲、大洋州.其中最大的是亚洲、最小的是大洋州.美洲分成两个州,分别是北美洲和南美洲,再加上南极洲就成为令一种概念的七大洲了

涟源市19331845716: 五大洲的国家(英语)北美洲5个非洲5个亚洲10个大洋洲5个欧洲5个 -
驹泼胆康:[答案] 北美洲国家:America(美国); Canada(加拿大); Panama(巴拿马);Mexico(墨西哥);Cuba(古巴); 非洲国家:Egypt(埃及);Morocco摩洛哥;Kenya(肯尼亚);Liberia利比里亚 ;Algeria(阿尔及利亚); 亚洲国家:China(...

涟源市19331845716: 五大洲用英语怎么说啊?不是 我要的是总称 不要5个大洲是什么 -
驹泼胆康:[答案] Five Continents 不用加the

涟源市19331845716: 五大洲的英文怎么说?yingwen1 -
驹泼胆康:[答案] 地理学上将地球大陆分为七大洲,即亚洲、欧洲、非洲、北美洲、南美洲、大洋洲和南极洲.但由于南极洲无人居住,南北美洲常合称美洲,所以又有五大洲的说法.如奥运会的五环旗就是由五环分别代表五大洲.如今的五大洲就是亚洲、欧洲、大洋洲...

涟源市19331845716: 五大洲四大洋 翻译成英语 -
驹泼胆康: 太平洋Pacific Ocean 印度洋Indian Ocean 大西洋Atlantic ocean 北冰洋the Arctic Ocean 亚洲Asia 非洲Africa 欧洲Europe 南极洲Antarctica 北美洲North America 南美洲South America或者Latin America 大洋洲Oceania

涟源市19331845716: 世界上有几大洲 几大洋?他们分别是什么?用英语怎样说? -
驹泼胆康:[答案] 七大洲:亚洲 Asia欧洲 Europe非洲 Africa南美洲 South America北美洲 North America大洋洲 Oceania南极洲 Antarctica四大洋:太平洋 Pacific Ocean北冰洋 Arctic Ocean印度洋 Indian Ocean大西洋 Atlantic Ocean...

本站内容来自于网友发表,不代表本站立场,仅表示其个人看法,不对其真实性、正确性、有效性作任何的担保
相关事宜请发邮件给我们
© 星空见康网