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Aisie

Frae Wikipedia, the free beuk o knawledge
Asie
Aurie44,579,000 km2(17,212,000 sq mi)[1]
Population4,462,676,731 (1st)[2]
Population density100/km2(260/sq mi)
GDP (nominal)$27.2 trillion (2016,1st)
GDP (PPP)$55.3 trillion (2016, 1st)
GDP per capita$5,635 (2016,5t)[3]
DemonymAsie
Kintras49 UN members 6 ither states
Dependencies
Non-UN states
InternetTLD.asia
Lairgest ceetiesMetropolitan auries o Asie
Leet o ceeties in Asie

AsieisYird's mucklest an maist populouscontinent,locatit primarily in theEastrenanNorthrenHemispheres.It shares the continental laundmass oEurasiewi the continent oEuropean the continental laundmass oAfro-Eurasiewi baith Europe anAfricae.Asie covers an aurie o 44,579,000 square kilometre (17,212,000 sq mi), aboot 30% o Yird's tot laund aurie an 8.7% o the Yird's tot surface aurie. The continent, that haes lang been hame tae the majority o thehuman population,[5]wis the steid o mony o thefirst ceevilisations.Asie is notable for nae anly its oweraw muckle size an population, but an aa dense an muckle settlements, as weel as vast barely populatit regions. Its 4.5 billion fowk constitute aboot 60% o the warld's population.

In general terms, Asie is boondit on the east bi the Paceefic Ocean, on the sooth bi the Indie Ocean an on the north bi the Arctic Ocean. The wastren boondar wi Europe is a historical ancultural construct,as thare is na clear pheesical an geografical separation atween them. The maist commonly acceptit boondaries place Asie tae the east o theSuez Canal,theUral River,an theUral Moontains,an sooth o theCaucasus Moontainsan theCaspiananBlack Seas.[6]

Cheenae an Indie alternatit in bein thelairgest economies in the warldfrae 1 tae 1800 CE. Cheenae wis a major economic pouer an attractit mony tae the east,[7][8][9][10]and for many the legendary wealth and prosperity of the ancient culture of India personified Asia,[11]attractin European commerce, exploration an colonialism. The accidental diskivery o Americae bi Columbus in sairch for Indie demonstrates this deep fascination. TheSilk Roadbecam the main East-Wast treddin route in the Asie hinterlands while theStraits o Malaccastuid as a major sea route. Asie haes exhibited economic dynamism (pairteecularly East Asie) as weel as robust population growthe in the 20t century, but oweraw population growthe haes syne fawen.[12]Asie wis the birthplace o maist o the warld's mainstream releegions includin Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism,Confucianism,Taoism (or Daoism),Jainism,Sikhism,Zoroastranism,as weel as mony ither releegions.

Gien its size an diversity, the concept o Asie—anamedatin back taeclessical antiquity—mey actually hae mair tae dae wihuman geografienorpheesical geografie.[13]Asie varies greatly athort an withinits regionswi regaird tae ethnic groups, culturs, environments, economics, historical ties an govrenment seestems. It an aa haes a mix o mony different climates rangin frae the equatorial sooth via the het desert in theMiddle East,temperate auries in the east an the continental centre tae vast subarctic an polar auries inSiberie.

See an aa

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References

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  1. National Geographic Family Reference Atlas of the World.Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society (U.S.). 2006. p. 264.
  2. "World Population Prospects: The 2017 Revision".ESA.UN.org(custom data acquired via website).United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs,Population Division.Retrieved10 September2017.
  3. "IMF (WEO April 2017 Edition) GDP nominal per capita - international dollar".
  4. World urban areas
  5. "The World at Six Billion".UN Population Division. Archived fraethe originalon 5 Mairch 2016.Unknown parameter|deadurl=ignored (help),Table 2
  6. National Geographic Atlas of the World(7th ed.). Washington, DC:National Geographic.1999.ISBN978-0-7922-7528-2."Europe" (pp. 68–9); "Asia" (pp. 90–1): "A commonly accepted division between Asia and Europe is formed by the Ural Mountains, Ural River, Caspian Sea, Caucasus Mountains, and the Black Sea with its outlets, the Bosporus and Dardanelles."
  7. "Professor M.D. Nalapat. Ensuring China's" Peaceful Rise ". Accessed January 22, 2016".Archived fraethe originalon 10 Januar 2010.Unknown parameter|deadurl=ignored (help)"Archived copy".Archived frae the original on 10 Januar 2010.Retrieved4 Februar2018.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  8. "Dahlman, Carl J; Aubert, Jean-Eric. China and the Knowledge Economy: Seizing the 21st Century. WBI Development Studies. World Bank Publications. Accessed January 22, 2016".Eric.ed.gov.Archived fraethe originalon 4 Mairch 2008.Retrieved9 November2017.Unknown parameter|deadurl=ignored (help)
  9. "The Real Great Leap Forward. The Economist. Sept 30, 2004".The Economist.Archived fraethe originalon 27 December 2016.Unknown parameter|deadurl=ignored (help)
  10. [1][deid airtin]
  11. [2]Archived20 November 2008 at theWayback Machine
  12. "Like herrings in a barrel".The Economist.The Economist online, The Economist Group (Millennium issue: Population). 23 December 1999. Archived fraethe originalon 4 Januar 2010.Unknown parameter|deadurl=ignored (help);Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=(help).
  13. "Asia".AccessScience.McGraw-Hill. Archived fraethe originalon 27 November 2011.Retrieved26 Julie2011.Unknown parameter|deadurl=ignored (help)"Archived copy".Archived frae the original on 27 November 2011.Retrieved4 Februar2018.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)