NorwayNoresund, Norway.(more)Europe, second smallest of the world’s , composed of the westward-projecting peninsulas of (the great landmass that it shares with ) and occupying nearly one-fifteenth of the world’s total land area. It is bordered on the north by the , on the west by the , and on the south (west to east) by the , the , the , and the . The eastern boundary (north to south) runs along the and then roughly southwest along the Emba (Zhem) River, terminating at the northern Caspian coast.Sveti StefanSveti Stefan, Montenegro.(more)Faroe Islands: TórshavnHarbour of Tórshavn, capital of the Faroe Islands, Denmark.(more)Europe’s largest islands and archipelagoes include , , , , the , the , the , , , , , , and . Its major peninsulas include and the , , , and peninsulas. Indented by numerous bays, fjords, and seas, continental Europe’s highly irregular coastline is about 24,000 miles (38,000 km) long.Among the continents, Europe is an anomaly. Larger only than , it is a small appendage of Eurasia. Yet the peninsular and insular western extremity of the continent, thrusting toward the North Atlantic Ocean, provides—thanks to its latitude and its physical geography—a relatively genial human habitat, and the long processes of human history came to mark off the region as the home of a distinctive civilization. In spite of its internal diversity, Europe has thus functioned, from the time it first emerged in the human consciousness, as a world apart, concentrating—to borrow a phrase from —“infinite riches in a little room.”Athens: AcropolisThe Acropolis and surrounding area, Athens.(more)As a conceptual construct, Europa, as the more learned of the first conceived it, stood in sharp contrast to both and Libya, the name then applied to the known northern part of . Literally, is now thought to have meant “Mainland,” rather than the earlier interpretation, “Sunset.” It appears to have suggested itself to the Greeks, in their maritime world, as an appropriate designation for the extensive northerly lands that lay beyond, lands with characteristics vaguely known yet clearly different from those inherent in the concepts of Asia and Libya—both of which, relatively prosperous and civilized, were associated closely with the culture of the Greeks and their predecessors. From the Greek perspective then, Europa was culturally backward and scantily settled. It was a barbarian world—that is, a non-Greek one, with its inhabitants making “bar-bar” noises in unintelligible tongues. Traders and travelers also reported that the Europe beyond possessed distinctive physical units, with mountain systems and lowland river basins much larger than those familiar to inhabitants of the Mediterranean region. It was clear as well that a succession of climates, markedly different from those of the Mediterranean borderlands, were to be experienced as Europe was penetrated from the south. The spacious eastern steppes and, to the west and north, primeval forests as yet only marginally touched by human occupancy further underlined environmental contrasts.Pont du Gard, Nîmes, FrancePont du Gard, an ancient Roman aqueduct near Nîmes, France.(more)The empire of , at its greatest extent in the 2nd century ce, revealed, and imprinted its culture on, much of the face of the continent. Trade relations beyond its frontiers also drew the remoter regions into its sphere. Yet it was not until the 19th and 20th centuries that modern was able to draw with some precision the geologic and geographic lineaments of the European continent, the peoples of which had meanwhile achieved domination over—and set in motion vast countervailing movements among—the inhabitants of much of the rest of the globe (see )., Europe, second smallest of the world’s continents, composed of the westward-projecting peninsulas of Eurasia (the great landmass that it shares with Asia) and occupying nearly one-fifteenth of the world’s total land area., Europe is a continent [t] located entirely in the Northern Hemisphere and mostly in the Eastern Hemisphere. It is bordered by the Arctic Ocean to the north, the Atlantic Ocean to the west, the Mediterranean Sea to the south, and Asia to the east..