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This is a list of countries spanning more than one continent, sometimes referred to as transcontinental states.

The definitions of what continent(s) a particular country covers may vary according to which criteria are used (whether purely geographical or geological or, on the other hand, political, economic or cultural criteria). An example is Russia, which has its historical core as well as most of its population (72%), economic activity and political institutions (such as its capital city) in Europe, yet geographically most of the territory (71%) is actually in Asia. The article borders of the continents describes the details and disputes of continental boundaries, which are reflected in this list. Separately listed below are 1.) countries whose contiguous continental territory or where nearby islands lie in two (or more) different continents, and 2.) distant non-contiguous parts lie on a different continent than the rest of the country.

Contents
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1 Contiguous boundary o 1.1 Africa and Asia 1.1.1 Egypt o 1.2 Asia and Europe 1.2.1 Azerbaijan 1.2.2 Kazakhstan 1.2.3 Russia 1.2.4 Turkey o 1.3 North and South America 1.3.1 Panama 2 Non-contiguous o 2.1 Africa and Europe o 2.2 Asia and Africa o 2.3 Asia and Oceania o 2.4 North America and Oceania o 2.5 North and South America o 2.6 Other examples o 2.7 Antarctica: claims 3 See also 4 References 5 External links

Contiguous boundary
Africa and Asia

Green Asia, pink African part of Egypt, grey rest of Africa See Borders of the continents for more details about the geographical border between Africa and Asia. The border between Asia and Africa is considered to go along the Isthmus of Suez and the Suez Canal in Egypt. The border continues through the Gulf of Suez, Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. Yemen controls Hanish Islands in the Red Sea which lie beyond this border,[citation needed] as well as Socotra, so it has non-contiguous island territory in Africa, but is not considered a transcontinental country. Egypt Two of 29 governorates of Egypt lie entirely on the Asian Sinai Peninsula and two are transcontinental: Ismailia Governorate is nearly equally divided by the Suez Canal, and Suez Governorate, which is coterminous with the transcontinental city of Suez, has a small portion east of the Canal.

Asia and Europe


See Borders of the continents for more details about the geographical border between Europe and Asia. See also Geographic criteria for EU membership.

Europe according to the UN Western sources, such as the National Geographic Society, usually state that the Europe-Asia boundary follows the watershed of the Ural Mountains to the source of the Ural River, then follows that river to the Caspian Sea. The border then follows the watershed of the Caucasus Mountains from the Caspian Sea to the Black Sea. This is the definition illustrated in this section, although variations exist.

Azerbaijan - situated in Eastern Europe and Western Asia. Georgia - situated in Eastern Europe and Western Asia.[1] Kazakhstan - situated in Central Asia and Eastern Europe. Russia - situated in Northern Asia and Eastern Europe. Turkey - situated in Western Asia and Eastern Europe.

Azerbaijan The northeastern Azerbaijan district borders run mostly along the main Caucasus watershed. Five districts are entirely within Europe, and the transcontinental Khizi district is almost equally divided on the two sides of the watershed. Azerbaijan is a member of the Council of Europe. Kazakhstan Kazakhstan's provincial borders do not follow the Ural River, although some of its western district borders do so. Two of the provinces are transcontinental, Atyrau Province and West Kazakhstan Province. The capital of the former, Atyrau, is split by the mouth of the Ural and is a transcontinental city. Almost all of it is in Asia with a small portion in Europe. Two of Atyrau Province's districts are entirely in Europe, three of its districts are entirely in Asia, and its Inderskiy and Makhambetskiy districts are transcontinental.[2] Five of West Kazakhstan's districts and the province's capital city of Oral are entirely in Europe, five of its districts are entirely in Asia, and its Akzhaikskiy district is transcontinental.[3] Russia Russian regions' borders follow the Ural Mountains and Ural River closely enough. There is a very small area (less than 300 km) of Russian territory south of the main Caucasus watershed in Asia. Orenburg on the Ural River is a transcontinental city. More detail on the political divisions through which the intercontinental boundary runs can be found here. Russia is a member of the Council of Europe. Turkey Three of Turkey's provinces are entirely in Europe while anakkale and Istanbul are transcontinental provinces. Three of anakkale's districts are entirely in Europe and its other nine districts are entirely in Asia. Nineteen of Istanbul's districts are entirely in Europe and its other twelve districts (forming Anatolia) are entirely in Asia.

North and South America

green - South America, pink/grey - North America See Borders of the continents and South America pages for more details about the geographical border between the two Americas. Panama Most authorities and most Panamanians consider Panama to be North America's[citation needed] southernmost nation, entirely within both Central America and North America. An alternative view is that the man-made Panama Canal, being a concrete line to demarcate the Isthmus of Panama, divides the continents. That would place Darin Province and four comarcas indgenas entirely in South America. Panam Province and Coln Province would both be transcontinental, with Coln nearly equally divided between both Americas and Panam Province unequally divided, with nearly a 1:4 ratio in South America's favour. A map of the locations of the districts of these two provinces and their area and population numbers is needed. The Pearl Islands and Taboga Island in the Gulf of Panama are part of Panam Province and would be associated with South America and North America, respectively. Six other provinces and the comarca indgena of Ngbe-Bugl would be entirely in North America.

Non-contiguous
Africa and Europe
See Borders of the continents for more details about the geographical border between Africa and Europe.

Italy: Although mainland Italy, Sardinia, Sicily, the Aegadian Islands, Ustica, and the Aeolian Islands are associated with Europe, the closest land to Pantelleria and the Pelagie Islands is Tunisia on the African mainland. They belong to the transcontinental Sicilian provinces of Trapani and Agrigento, respectively, and they are coterminous with the comuni of Pantelleria and Lampedusa e Linosa, respectively. Malta: Malta has been geopolitically European in modern times, but may be considered geographically associated with Africa. More detail may be found here. Portugal: Continental Portugal is in Europe, while the Azores archipelago (also associated with Europe) and the archipelago of Madeira (geographically part of Africa) in the Atlantic Ocean constitute the Autonomous regions of Portugal. The Azores has two islands (Corvo and Flores) that are part of the American plate while the latter region also includes Porto Santo Island, the Desertas Islands, and the Savage Islands, all of which are in fact African islands. Spain: Although its mainland is in Europe, Spain has holdings (the Canary Islands in the Atlantic, the cities of Ceuta and Melilla on mainland North Africa and its Plazas de soberana close to that cities) that are geographically part of Africa. Canary Islands, Ceuta and Melilla are considered Autonomous communities of Spain, the Plazas de Soberana are under different military status. The African Mediterranean island of Isla de Alborn belongs to the transcontinental city of Almera and the transcontinental province of Almera.

Asia and Africa

Yemen: Although mainland Yemen is in the southern Arabian Peninsula and thus part of Asia, and its Hanish Islands and Perim in the Red Sea are associated with Asia, Yemen controls the archipelago of Socotra, which lies east of the horn of Somalia and is much closer to Africa than Asia. Socotra and the Hadramawt region constitute the transcontinental Hadramawt Governorate.

Asia and Oceania

Indonesia: Indonesia is commonly associated with Asia, Southeast Asia or Malay Archipelago. Maps or atlases usually include Indonesian portion of New Guinea (Irian Jaya) and Maluku Islands. East Timor: East Timor is classified as Asian by the United Nations,[4] and a member of the ASEAN Regional Forum.[5] East Timor has applied for membership of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), at which it is an observer; it is also an observer at the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF). Biogeographically, East Timor lies within Wallacea, an ecological transition zone between Asia and Australasia.[6] The Portuguese sources, Lello Universal and Enciclopdia Luso-Brasileira, described Timor as being in Oceania. The social organization of its tribal population is extremely similar to societies in Oceania.[7] The languages spoken in the territory are mainly Austronesian, the same group that comprises the languages of Maritime Southeast Asia which includes Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines, and also New Guinea which is usually considered as part of Melanesia.[8] Australia: The Commonwealth of Australia consists of its namesake continent and island possessions associated with Oceania, Asia, and Antarctica. Its Indian Ocean island possessions of Christmas Island and the Cocos (Keeling) Islands are associated with Asia. The majority of the ancestry of Australia's Asian island residents is Asian and the majority of them are Muslim or Buddhist. Japan: All of Japan consists of Asian islands except for the remote and uninhabited Minami Torishima, which is an Oceanian island and administratively part of the city of Tokyo and the subdivision of Ogasawara Village, along with other outlying Japanese islands to the south and southeast of the city.[citation needed] Papua New Guinea is a part of Melanesia and is sometimes included in the Malay Archipelago of Southeast Asia. It is now seeking membership in ASEAN which it had been in since the 1970s.[9][10] Philippines: The Republic of the Philippines occupies the Philippine Deep Sea and a part of Mariana Trench which is officially spans between the borders of Asia and Oceania. Generally, when Filipinos in the Philippines are asked, they would say that their country belongs to Asia, while those living elsewhere (like the Filipino migrants), they'd say that it belongs to the Pacific Islands.

North America and Oceania

While the territory of the United States lies overwhelmingly in North America, it includes the state of Hawaii in Oceania, as well as other Oceanian island possessions and Alaskan islands on NE Asia's continental shelf.

North and South America

Most geographic authorities delineate the land border dividing the Americas somewhere along the Isthmus of Panama. The most common demarcation follows the Darien watershed along the Colombia-Panama boundary. A less common dividing line (but used herein) is the Panama Canal transecting the isthmus; by that definition, Panama would be reckoned to have territory in both continents. Panama City, Panama's capital, sits on the Pacific (southern) coast near the Panama Canal in the eastern (South American) portion of the country. Panama lies almost entirely on the Caribbean Plate, with a small portion on the South American Plate. Geopolitically and geographically, all of Panama is generally considered a part of North America alone and among the countries of North America. The sea islands division is more complicated. All Caribbean islands are often labeled as North American. The Dutch dependency Aruba, some parts of the Netherlands Antilles (Bonaire and Curaao islands), and the state of Trinidad and Tobago lie on the continental shelf of South America, and are considered South American. Venezuela's Isla Aves and the Colombian islands of San Andrs and Providencia are geographically North American. Isla Aves is one of the Federal dependencies of Venezuela under the administration of the transcontinental city of Caracas.

North American Caribbean islands belonging to South American countries:

Isla Aves [4]

San Andrs and Providencia.

Aruba: Lies on the continental shelf of South America, and is thus considered to lie entirely in South America, but all Caribbean islands are often labelled as North American, and the language and cultural links are not to South America.

Colombia: Mainland Colombia is in northwestern South America and Malpelo Island in the Pacific Ocean is also associated with South America, but the nation also controls the San Andrs and Providencia archipelago, 400 miles WNW of Colombia's Caribbean

coast, near the Caribbean coast of Nicaragua. This archipelago is coterminous with the department of the same name. Netherlands Antilles: Bonaire and Curaao lie entirely in South America because of the position of the continental shelf, while Saba, Sint Eustatius, and Sint Maarten lie entirely in North America. Similarly to Aruba, its historical connections are with the other Caribbean islands that are often labelled as North American, and the language and cultural links are not to South America but increasingly because of tourism and the financial industry to other English speaking Caribbean nations. Trinidad and Tobago: Lies on the continental shelf of South America, and is thus considered to lie entirely in South America, but all Caribbean islands are often labelled as North American, and the language and cultural links are not to South America but to the rest of the English speaking Caribbean nations.

Other examples

Chile is mostly on the South American mainland and includes the Oceanian islands of Easter Island and Sala y Gmez Island. They and the outlying South American Juan Fernndez Islands and Desventuradas Islands are part of the Valparaso Region. Denmark includes the North American island of Greenland and the Faroe Islands associated with Europe. Greenland was integrated into the Danish Kingdom in 1953 and home rule was granted in 1979. For more information see Rigsfllesskabet. France includes overseas departments in Africa (Runion), North America (Guadeloupe, Martinique, Saint Pierre and Miquelon), and South America (French Guiana). These entities have the same legal status as the departments of Metropolitan France. There are other island possessions associated with North America, Africa, Oceania, and Antarctica that are French overseas collectives or part of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands. The Netherlands has the Caribbean island possessions of the Netherlands Antilles and Aruba. While Aruba has self-government, the Netherlands Antilles are divided into special municipalities by island group. Parts of the Netherlands Antilles will be moving toward greater incorporation into the metropolitan Netherlands, while others for selfgovernment soon.

These examples have integral parts associated with other continents. France, Norway, South Africa, and the United Kingdom may also be considered transcontinental by virtue of distant island possessions associated with a continent other than where the country is based.

Antarctica: claims
A number of nations claim ownership over portions of the continent of Antarctica. Some, including Argentina and Chile, consider the Antarctic land they claim to be integral parts of their national territory. Some nations also have sub-Antarctic island possessions north of 60S latitude and thus recognized by international law under the Antarctic Treaty System, which holds in abeyance land claims south of 60S latitude.

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