06-20-2002, 06:08 AM
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06-20-2002, 06:25 AM
someone answer! I have a hard time sleeping at night as it is!!
06-20-2002, 06:28 AM
Maybe it isn't.
06-20-2002, 06:31 AM
It has water surrounding it, doesn't it? What else qualifies whether something is an island?
06-20-2002, 06:35 AM
australia is bigger than greenland. just the way maps are made it distorts it.
edit - whoops i read the thread wrong at first. oh well
Edited By HedCold on June 20 2002 at 02:35
Quote:It has water surrounding it, doesn't it? What else qualifies whether something is an island?Africa is an island too then. as to what qualifies an island, i don't know
edit - whoops i read the thread wrong at first. oh well
Edited By HedCold on June 20 2002 at 02:35
06-20-2002, 06:36 AM
Quote:australia is bigger than greenlandI said it was, that's the whole point behind my questioning why Australia isn't an island.
Quote:Africa is an island too then. as to what qualifies an island, i don't knowYea, but they have the AIDS
06-20-2002, 06:38 AM
from encyclopedia.com
[quote]island - relatively small body of land surrounded entirely by water. (As the oceans form a continuous mass of water on the earth's surface, all continents are islands in the strict sense of the word.) The largest islands on earth are, in descending order of size, Greenland, New Guinea, Borneo, Madagascar, Baffin Island, Sumatra, Honshu (largest of the islands of Japan), and Great Britain. Depending on their origin, islands are either continental or oceanic. Continental islands are created by rise in sea level where only the summits of coastal highlands remain above water; or by the sea breaking through an isthmus or peninsula and cutting the land from the mainland. Typical continental islands are Great Britain and Martha's Vineyard. Other islands emerge along coasts as barrier islands, such as the Outer Banks, NC. Oceanic islands can result from volcanic islands rising above the water, especially on or near a mid-ocean ridge, as when the island of Surtsey appeared along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge S of Iceland in 1963. Island arcs, such as the Aleutian Islands, result from magmatic activity associated with the convergence of lithospheric plates (see plate tectonics ). Oceanic islands are most often the emergent tips of volcanoes (seamounts) formed by hotspots. Oceanic islands that result from coral growth on the summit of seamounts are called coral islands or atolls (see coral reefs ). These low islands only occur in tropical ocean areas. Oceanic islands are generally characterized by low faunal diversity, consisting of a few sea birds and insects. Vegetation is usually more abundant, as seeds are carried from remote lands by wind, water currents, and birds.
:thumbs-up:
Edited By HedCold on June 20 2002 at 02:39
[quote]island - relatively small body of land surrounded entirely by water. (As the oceans form a continuous mass of water on the earth's surface, all continents are islands in the strict sense of the word.) The largest islands on earth are, in descending order of size, Greenland, New Guinea, Borneo, Madagascar, Baffin Island, Sumatra, Honshu (largest of the islands of Japan), and Great Britain. Depending on their origin, islands are either continental or oceanic. Continental islands are created by rise in sea level where only the summits of coastal highlands remain above water; or by the sea breaking through an isthmus or peninsula and cutting the land from the mainland. Typical continental islands are Great Britain and Martha's Vineyard. Other islands emerge along coasts as barrier islands, such as the Outer Banks, NC. Oceanic islands can result from volcanic islands rising above the water, especially on or near a mid-ocean ridge, as when the island of Surtsey appeared along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge S of Iceland in 1963. Island arcs, such as the Aleutian Islands, result from magmatic activity associated with the convergence of lithospheric plates (see plate tectonics ). Oceanic islands are most often the emergent tips of volcanoes (seamounts) formed by hotspots. Oceanic islands that result from coral growth on the summit of seamounts are called coral islands or atolls (see coral reefs ). These low islands only occur in tropical ocean areas. Oceanic islands are generally characterized by low faunal diversity, consisting of a few sea birds and insects. Vegetation is usually more abundant, as seeds are carried from remote lands by wind, water currents, and birds.
:thumbs-up:
Edited By HedCold on June 20 2002 at 02:39
06-20-2002, 06:41 AM
so in the "strict sense of the word", Greenland is NOT the biggest island. I vote that we stop saying it is from now on.
06-20-2002, 06:44 AM
but then greenland won't have a claim to fame
06-20-2002, 06:46 AM
What about the fact that Greenland is mostly ice and Iceland is mostly Green. Who are the ad wizards that came up with that one?
06-20-2002, 06:47 AM
isn't that more of icelands claim to fame?
06-20-2002, 06:48 AM
I was simply posing the question. And Bjork, and the fact that they have more bars per square foot than any other country, in that order, are Iceland's claim to fame.
06-20-2002, 06:52 AM
so greenland doesn't really have any other claim to fame do they?
poor greenlanders
poor greenlanders
06-20-2002, 06:54 AM
yea, all 5 of them
06-20-2002, 06:57 AM
the capitol of greenland is Nuuk and the capitol of iceland is Reykjavík
i like the name of the greenland one better
i like the name of the greenland one better
06-20-2002, 06:58 AM
BJORK! BARS! NUFF SAID!!
06-20-2002, 06:59 AM
i'm not a fan of bjork
06-20-2002, 07:00 AM
name an artist from Greenland who's better
06-20-2002, 07:04 AM
06-20-2002, 07:06 AM
If they have to host their site on angelfire, I'm thinking they suck
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