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Answer for the clue "Eurasia, e.g ", 8 letters:
landmass

Alternative clues for the word landmass

Word definitions for landmass in dictionaries

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
alt. A large continuous area of land, either surrounded by sea or contiguous with another landmass. n. A large continuous area of land, either surrounded by sea or contiguous with another landmass.

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Landmass (2008) is an album by the American ambient musician Steve Roach .

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ And along the crooked border where the landmasses once came together, the researchers made an extraordinary discovery. ▪ At this distance, the patterns of ocean and landmass were clear. ▪ Like the modern-day Gulf Stream, these ...

Usage examples of landmass.

Boulders, rock crevasses, great furrows where continental drift dragged entire landmasses over the ocean floor, larger gaps where tectonic-plate activity opened up the bottom of the ocean and spewed forth lava.

On the crescent-moon-shaped Oma atoll, Glassman had found two villes on opposite points of the landmass at war with each other.

The scientists at the labs had not figured on the hurriedness of the malaise of insidious maligned death fluttering like a blanket of vultures over a now doomed landmass.

In those days the continents were fused into the single vast Pangaean landmass, and the dinosaurs had been able to spread across the planet.

On the four landmasses in the southern hemisphere, troops from the Temporary City were dropping units of the bioagent that would spread on the air and water, propagate, and then go into a dormant state on surfaces as soon as the optimum concentration had been reached.

Among the world's landmasses, area and the number of competing societies were largest for Eurasia, much smaller for Australia and New Guinea and especially for Tasmania.

The lighter-colored continental regions around the edges and to the north are younger rocks that ac­creted to the craton throughout the aeons as the landmass slowly grew.

Basing his cartography on ancient sources now lost, the French academician depicted a clear waterway across the southern continent dividing it into two principal landmasses lying east and west of the line now marked by the Trans-Antarctic Mountains.

Hapgood envisaged that both could occur: that the earth’s crust did indeed exhibit continental drift as the geologists claimed—almost imperceptibly, over hundreds of millions of years—but that it also occasionally experienced very rapid one-piece displacements which had no effect on the relationships between individual landmasses but which thrust entire continents (or parts of them) into and out of the planet’s two fixed polar zones (the perennially cold and icy regions surrounding the North and South Poles of the axis of spin).

Since the Bishop of Rome, long years ago, granted sole rights there to Spain and Portugal, giving no thought to the bare facts that French, Norse, and even Irish had prior claim by way of settlement to at least the nearer coasts of the northernmost landmass, Spaniards there have out-savaged the very indigenous savages in the deadly ferocity with which they treated other Europeans found there unless they were mercenaries in Spanish hire.

Since the Bishop of Rome, long years ago, granted sole rights there to Spain and Portugal, giving no thought to the bare facts that French, Norse, and even Irish had prior claim by way of settlement to at least the nearer coasts of the northernmost landmass, Spaniards there have outsavaged the very indigenous savages in the deadly ferocity with which they treated other Europeans found there unless they were mercenaries in Spanish hire.

The crystals form at great depths beneath ancient cratonic landmasses and are blasted to the surface when diatrematic activity forms a kimberlite pipe.

At those early dates all the landmasses surrounding New Guinea were still occupied exclusively by hunter-gatherers, so this ancient agriculture must have developed independently in New Guinea.

This planet is fourth position out from a class-M sun, with a blue sky stretched over six small landmasses that cover only about a third of the surface.

The only landmasses available were in the polar regions, where the climate was sub arctic, with a long extremely cold winter, temperatures frequently as low as or lower than -100 degrees F, summers barely two Terran months.