The New Childrens Encyclopedia

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
143

Aalborg

Arkhangel’sk

Bergen

Bilbao

Bordeaux

Groznyy

le Havre

Lille

Manchester

Murmansk

Nantes

Palma

Simferopol’

Stavanger

Tampere

Trondheim

Belfast

Cardiff

Edinburgh

Gdansk

Lyon

Strasbourg

Toulouse
Venice

Cagliari

Irákleio

Lárisa

Naples Salonica

Astrakhan’

Frankfurt
am Main

Gothenburg

Kaliningrad

L’viv

Marseille

Orenburg

Saratov

Vitsyebsk

Voronezh

Zaragoza

Glasgow

Palermo

Valencia

Barcelona

Birmingham

Dnipropetrovs’k Donets’k

Hamburg

Kazan’

Kharkiv
Krakow

Milan

Munich

Nizhniy Novgorod

Odesa

Poznan

Rostov-na-Donu

Samara

Turin

Ufa

Wroclaw Volgograd

St Petersburg

Istanbul

Clermont-Ferrand

AMSTERDAM

ANDORRALA VELLA

BELGRADE

BERLIN

BERN

BRUSSELS

BUDAPEST CHISINAU

COPENHAGEN

DUBLIN

HELSINKI

LONDON

LUXEMBOURG

MADRID

MINSK

MOSCOW

OSLO

PARIS PRAGUE

REYKJAVÍK

ROME

RIGA

SARAJEVO

SKOPJE

SOFIA

STOCKHOLM TALLINN

TIRANA

PODGORICA

VIENNA

VILNIUS

WARSAW

ZAGREB

KIEV

BUCHAREST

BRATISLAVA

ATHENS

LJUBLJANA

VALLETTA

PRISTINA

THE HAGUE
Channel
Islands
(to UK)

Isle
of Man
(to UK)

Faeroe Islands
(to Denmark)

Svalbard
(to Norway)

RUSSIAN


FEDERATION


FINLAND

UNITED

KINGDOM

IRELAND

AIN


FRANCE

ANDORRA

NETHERLANDS

GERMANY

DENMARK

POLAND

CZECH
REPUBLIC
SLOVAKIA

HUNGARY

CROATIA BOSNIA
& HERZEGOVINA

MONTENEGRO

SERBIA

ALBANIA

MACEDONIA

BULGARIA

GREECE

MALTA

ROMANIA

UKRAINE

BELARUS

LITHUANIA

ESTONIA

ICELAND

MONACO I
T
A
L
Y

S

W

E

D

E

N

SANMARINO

VATICAN CITY

N

O

R

W

A

Y

ENGLAND

WALES

SCOTLAND
NORTHERN
IRELAND

BELGIU
M

T
u
r
k e
y

LIECHTENSTEIN

RUSS. FED.
(Kaliningrad)

SWITZERLAND

KOSOVO(disputed)

SLOVE

NIA

LATVIA

MOLDOVA

LUXEMBOURG

Shetland
Islands
Outer
Hebrides

Corsica

MallorcaMenorca
Ibiza
BalearicIsla

nds Sardinia

Gotland

Sicily

Crete

Novaya
Zemlya

Åland

M e d i
t e
r
r
a
n
e a
n
S e a

Bay of
Biscay

EnglishChannel

Ty
rr
he
ni
an
Sea

Ionian
Sea

North
Sea

Ba

lt

ic

S

ea

Gu

lf

of

Bo

thn

ia

B l

a c k S e a

Norwegian
Sea

De

nma

rkStrait

Barents
Sea

C
as
p
ia
n
Se
a

Sea of
Azov

Aegean
Sea

Kara
Sea

White
Sea

ATLANTIC
OCEAN

Pyr
ene
es

U r a l M o u n t a i n s

A Caucasus

lp

s

Mont Blanc 15,771ft (4807m) AUSTRIA

Elbrus 18,510ft (5642m)

Ebro

Loire

Sein
e

Po

Rh
ine

Elbe
Vist
ula

Danube

Rh

ôn

e

Volg
a

Nort
hernDv
ina

Od
er

Dni

epe

r

Dnies
ter

Lake
Ladoga

Lake
Onega

Vättern

Vänern

A


S


I
A

A F R
I C A ASIA

CONTINENTS OF
THE WOLRD

The Mediterranean Sea
Europe is divided from Africa
by the Mediterranean, a sea
that is almost completely
surrounded by land. The
only way in and out to the
Atlantic Ocean is through
the Strait of Gibraltar, which
is just 9 miles (14 km) wide.

FAMOUS PLACES


OSurtsey, a small island off Iceland,
was formed by the eruption of an
underwater volcano. It rose above
sea level in 1963–68, making it one
of the world’s youngest islands.

OThe Low Countries—Belgium and
the Netherlands—are so low that
some of the land actually lies below
sea level and has to be protected by
huge dikes.

The northeastern part of Europe,
known as Scandinavia, includes
the countries of Norway, Sweden,
Denmark, and Finland.

Mount Etna, on the island
of Sicily, is the largest
active volcano in Europe.
Etna erupts almost
continuously, making it
one of the world’s most
active volcanoes.

Istanbul, the largest city in Turkey, is
the only city to span two continents.
Part is in Europe, and part in Asia.

The island of Iceland is extremely
volcanically active. It is home to
several volcanoes and many geysers.
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