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Asia: China / South Korea / Russia *Pacific Ocean / Korea Bay / Sea of Japan / Yellow Sea: South Korea: Asia: Democratic People's Republic of Korea *Pacific Ocean / Sea of Japan / Yellow Sea: Kuwait: Middle East: Iraq / Saudi Arabia *Indian Ocean / Persian Gulf: Kyrgyzstan: Asia: China / Kazakhstan / Tajikistan / Uzbekistan: Laos: Southeast Asia
A common synonym for East Asia is Northeast Asia, although some geographers only include the Japanese Archipelago, the Korean Peninsula, the Mongolian Plateau, and the Northeast China Plain, as well as the mountainous regions of the Russian Far East (a part of Siberia) in this region.
This is a list of articles holding galleries of maps of present-day countries and dependencies. The list includes all countries listed in the List of countries , the French overseas departments, the Spanish and Portuguese overseas regions and inhabited overseas dependencies.
A world map is a map of most or all of the surface of Earth. World maps, because of their scale, must deal with the problem of projection. Maps rendered in two dimensions by necessity distort the display of the three-dimensional surface of the Earth. While this is true of any map, these distortions reach extremes in a world map.
China, Hong Kong, Macau, North Korea, South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Mongolia. North Asia Siberia and the Russian Far East in the Asia-Pacific region of Russia – an area east of the Ural Mountains .
The Mediterranean Sea, between Africa and Europe The Atlantic Ocean around the plate boundaries (text is in Finnish). The African and European mainlands are non-contiguous, and the delineation between these continents is thus merely a question of which islands are to be associated with which continent.
In medieval T and O maps, Asia makes for half the world's landmass, with Africa and Europe accounting for a quarter each. With the High Middle Ages, Southwest and Central Asia receive better resolution in Muslim geography, and the 11th century map by Mahmud al-Kashgari is the first world map drawn from a Central Asian point of view.
The United Nations geoscheme is a system which divides 248 countries and territories in the world into six continental regions, 22 geographical subregions, and two intermediary regions. [1] It was devised by the United Nations Statistics Division (UNSD) based on the M49 coding classification . [ 2 ]