At some point, can’t everything be “an island” if you zoom out far enough?
Ognius on
Nope, hope that helps.
Whole_Obligation_776 on
Experts said: What? No? Why would anybody say that?
Careless-Wrap6843 on
I mean there is that lake in Wyoming (I think) that flows into both the Atlantic and pacific so I guess you could say it splits North America into two islands.
braziliansax on
If Europe can be a continent this can be a island.
RedHeadedSicilian52 on
You know, someone wrote a song about the Orinoco flow once…
graywalker616 on
Rivers don’t define islands.
OnettiDescontrolado on
The De la Lata basin is bigger than the Orinoco basin.
Sm00thSayer on
A bunch of no’s but nobody explaining why no?
_snids on
Everything is an island if you zoom out far enough.
patrick-1977 on
Everything is an island!
Matman161 on
Oh my God we do this every fucking week! NO a river like that does not cause an island
SimpleMoonFarmer on
Yes, this should be canon, and added to the Trivial Pursuit geography questions.
gooneryoda on
The area is called Guiana Island which is a singular fluvial-maritime island and is larger than Switzerland. It is classified as a fluvial island because it was created by sediment deposited by the Amazon River though its location at the sea makes it influenced by sea tides.
apadin1 on
The Chicago River is connected to the Illinois River by a man made canal. The Illinois River flows south into the Mississippi and the Chicago River flows north into Lake Michigan.
So by this logic, the entire eastern half of the United States is an island bounded by the Mississippi River, Illinois River, and Chicago River in the west, the Great Lakes in the north, the Atlantic Ocean in the east, and the Gulf of Mexico in the south.
CAL9k on
I was taught that islands are surrounded by the same hydrological body of water on all sides. So this would not be an island because the rivers are distinct from the ocean.
You can also think of it in (less accurate) terms of water level. If the water level is the same on all sides (barring the technicality of river levels being slightly lower on the downstream end of a river island, or like an island on the edge of a waterfall) then it is an island. If water levels are higher on one side it’s not an island.
Crane_1989 on
What about North America? The Chicago river connects Lake Michigan to the Mississippi, the entire eastern seaboard is an island too.
Ducokapi on
Finally, the United Republic of the Greater Guyanas
Thus, the Casiquire River is an Amazon affiliate link.
denn23rus on
then all of Europe is an island, because you can sail from the Arctic Ocean only along the rivers to the Black Sea
BrownEyesWhiteScarf on
No, especially since people don’t consider Calcutta as being on an island when it’s on the inside of the Ganges River delta.
matiaskeeper on
> South America is shaped by two giant river basins
Rio de la Plata basin: am I a joke to you? 🤨
PopeGeraldVII on
I’m not having this stupid fucking debate about how North and South America are separate because of the canal again, but this time with islands.
GetDownMakeLava on
Rivers and roads til I meet you
aeschynanthus_sp on
Right, it all depends on what your definition of an island is. An example from Finland is an area called [*Soisalo*](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soisalo), which is the largest island in Finland according to us Finns; the area is 1,600 km^2
But the surrounding waters are on different levels, the difference being four metres. There are short rivers or rapids connecting the surrounding lakes.
Albuwhatwhat on
Then isn’t all of South America an island due to the Panama Canal?
This is stupid.
coreyjdl on
No
Hammanna on
Is the eastern US an island?
Ambitious-Concern-42 on
No. People keep trying to argue certain examples but it all comes down to, it’s freshwater and makes a big descent to the ocean. Doesn’t count.
sCOLEiosis on
Sail around it
Qudpb on
Brazil is an island during Pantanal’s wet season
Lefaid on
I am going to fart this out so a Reddit expert can correct me.
I think civilization on this part of South America functions like an island too. Their only population centers are coastal and there is no road connecting those cities to Brazil or Venezuela.
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34 Kommentare
At some point, can’t everything be “an island” if you zoom out far enough?
Nope, hope that helps.
Experts said: What? No? Why would anybody say that?
I mean there is that lake in Wyoming (I think) that flows into both the Atlantic and pacific so I guess you could say it splits North America into two islands.
If Europe can be a continent this can be a island.
You know, someone wrote a song about the Orinoco flow once…
Rivers don’t define islands.
The De la Lata basin is bigger than the Orinoco basin.
A bunch of no’s but nobody explaining why no?
Everything is an island if you zoom out far enough.
Everything is an island!
Oh my God we do this every fucking week! NO a river like that does not cause an island
Yes, this should be canon, and added to the Trivial Pursuit geography questions.
The area is called Guiana Island which is a singular fluvial-maritime island and is larger than Switzerland. It is classified as a fluvial island because it was created by sediment deposited by the Amazon River though its location at the sea makes it influenced by sea tides.
The Chicago River is connected to the Illinois River by a man made canal. The Illinois River flows south into the Mississippi and the Chicago River flows north into Lake Michigan.
So by this logic, the entire eastern half of the United States is an island bounded by the Mississippi River, Illinois River, and Chicago River in the west, the Great Lakes in the north, the Atlantic Ocean in the east, and the Gulf of Mexico in the south.
I was taught that islands are surrounded by the same hydrological body of water on all sides. So this would not be an island because the rivers are distinct from the ocean.
You can also think of it in (less accurate) terms of water level. If the water level is the same on all sides (barring the technicality of river levels being slightly lower on the downstream end of a river island, or like an island on the edge of a waterfall) then it is an island. If water levels are higher on one side it’s not an island.
What about North America? The Chicago river connects Lake Michigan to the Mississippi, the entire eastern seaboard is an island too.
Finally, the United Republic of the Greater Guyanas
[Relevant XKCD](https://xkcd.com/2838/)
If each of the rivers is navigable, then yes.
Thus, the Casiquire River is an Amazon affiliate link.
then all of Europe is an island, because you can sail from the Arctic Ocean only along the rivers to the Black Sea
No, especially since people don’t consider Calcutta as being on an island when it’s on the inside of the Ganges River delta.
> South America is shaped by two giant river basins
Rio de la Plata basin: am I a joke to you? 🤨
I’m not having this stupid fucking debate about how North and South America are separate because of the canal again, but this time with islands.
Rivers and roads til I meet you
Right, it all depends on what your definition of an island is. An example from Finland is an area called [*Soisalo*](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soisalo), which is the largest island in Finland according to us Finns; the area is 1,600 km^2
But the surrounding waters are on different levels, the difference being four metres. There are short rivers or rapids connecting the surrounding lakes.
Then isn’t all of South America an island due to the Panama Canal?
This is stupid.
No
Is the eastern US an island?
No. People keep trying to argue certain examples but it all comes down to, it’s freshwater and makes a big descent to the ocean. Doesn’t count.
Sail around it
Brazil is an island during Pantanal’s wet season
I am going to fart this out so a Reddit expert can correct me.
I think civilization on this part of South America functions like an island too. Their only population centers are coastal and there is no road connecting those cities to Brazil or Venezuela.