The Scandinavian Peninsula covered in snow
The Scandinavian Peninsula during winter
The peninsula of Seventeen Seventy, Queensland, where Captain Cook landed in 1770

A peninsula is a landform that extends from a mainland, is connected to the mainland on only one side, and is mostly surrounded by water. Peninsulas exist on each continent. The largest peninsula in the world is the Arabian Peninsula.

Etymology

The word peninsula derives from Latin paeninsula, from paene 'almost' and insula 'island'. The word entered English in the 16th century.

Definitions

A peninsula is generally defined as a piece of land surrounded on most sides by water.

A peninsula may be bordered by more than one body of water, and the body of water need not be an ocean or a sea. A piece of land on a very tight river bend, or one between two rivers, is sometimes said to form a peninsula, for example in the New Barbadoes Neck in New Jersey, United States. The connection between a peninsula and the mainland may be an isthmus; for example, the Isthmus of Corinth connects the Peloponnese peninsula to Central Greece.

Formation and types

Peninsulas can be formed by continental drift, glacial erosion, glacial meltwater, glacial deposition, marine sediment, marine transgressions, volcanoes, divergent boundaries or river sedimentation. More than one factor may contribute to the formation of a peninsula. For example, in the case of Florida, continental drift, marine sediment, and marine transgressions all contributed to its shape.

Glaciers

In the case of formation from glaciers (for example, the Antarctic Peninsula or Cape Cod), peninsulas can be created due to glacial erosion, meltwater or deposition. If erosion formed the peninsula, softer and harder rocks were present, and since the glacier only erodes softer rock, it formed a basin. This may create peninsulas, and occurred for example in the Keweenaw Peninsula.

In the case of formation from meltwater, melting glaciers deposit sediment and form moraines, which act as dams for the meltwater. This may create bodies of water that surround the land, forming peninsulas.

If deposition formed the peninsula, the peninsula was composed of sedimentary rock, which was created from a large deposit of glacial drift. The hill of drift becomes a peninsula if the hill formed near water but was still connected to the mainland, for example during the formation of Cape Cod about 23,000 years ago.

Others

In the case of formation from volcanoes, when a volcano erupts magma near water, it may form a peninsula (such as the Alaskan Peninsula). Peninsulas formed from volcanoes are especially common when the volcano erupts near shallow water. Marine sediment may form peninsulas by the creation of limestone. A rift peninsula may form as a result of a divergent boundary in plate tectonics (such as the Arabian Peninsula), while a convergent boundary may also form peninsulas (for example, Gibraltar or the Indian subcontinent). Peninsulas can also form due to sedimentation in rivers. When a river carrying sediment flows into an ocean, the sediment is deposited, forming a delta peninsula.

Marine transgressions (changes in sea level) may form peninsulas, but may also affect existing peninsulas. For example, the water level may change, which causes a peninsula to become an island during high water levels. Similarly, wet weather causing higher water levels make peninsulas appear smaller, while dry weather make them appear larger. Sea level rise from global warming will permanently reduce the size of some peninsulas over time.

Uses

Peninsulas are noted for having acted as shelters for prehistoric humans and Neanderthals. The landform is advantageous because it gives hunting access to both land and sea animals. They can also serve as markers of a nation's borders. In history, peninsulas have played a vital role in trade and commerce because of their access to water through an isthmus. The Malay Peninsula, located at the convergence of the Indian Ocean and the China Seas, played an important role in east-west trade.

List of the largest peninsulas in the world

RankPeninsulaContinentSubregionPart ofAreaNation(s)Source
(km2)(sq mi)
1Arabian PeninsulaAsiaWest AsiaArabia3,100,0001,200,000Iraq (southern region) Jordan (southern region) Kuwait Oman Qatar Saudi Arabia United Arab Emirates Yemen
2Indochinese PeninsulaSoutheast AsiaMainland Southeast Asia2,000,000770,000Cambodia Laos Malaysia (western region) Myanmar Thailand Vietnam
3Deccan PeninsulaSouth AsiaIndian Subcontinent1,900,000800,000India (southern region)
4Somali PeninsulaEast AfricaHorn of Africa1,882,757726,936Ethiopia Somalia Somaliland
5Labrador PeninsulaNorth AmericaNorthern America1,400,000540,000Canada (eastern region)
6Anatolian PeninsulaAsiaWest AsiaAsia Minor755,688291,773Turkey (Asian part)
7Scandinavian PeninsulaEuropeNorthern EuropeFennoscandia750,000290,000Finland (northern region) Norway Sweden
8Balkan PeninsulaEuropeSouthern EuropeSouth-eastern Europe666,700257,400Albania Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgaria Croatia (southern mainland) Greece (mainland) Kosovo Montenegro North Macedonia Romania (coastal region) Serbia (central region) Slovenia (south-western region) Turkey (European part)
9Iberian PeninsulaSouth-western Europe583,256225,196Andorra France (French Cerdagne) Gibraltar (United Kingdom) Portugal (mainland) Spain (mainland)
10Antarctic PeninsulaAntarcticaWest Antarctica522,000202,000
11Taymyr PeninsulaAsiaNorth AsiaNorth Siberian Lowland400,000150,000Russia (Krasnoyarsk Krai)
12Kamchatka PeninsulaRussian Far East370,000140,000Russia (Kamchatka Krai)

See also

Bibliography

  • Heos, Bridget (2010). The Creation of Peninsulas (1st ed.). New York: Rosen Pub. ISBN 978-1-4358-5301-0. OCLC .
  • Mis, Melody S. (2009). Exploring Peninsulas (1st ed.). New York: PowerKids Press. ISBN 978-1-4358-2711-0. OCLC .
  • Nadeau, Isaac (2006). Peninsulas (1st ed.). New York: Rosen Pub. Group's PowerKids Press. ISBN 1-4042-3125-0. OCLC .
  • Niz, Ellen Sturm (2006). Peninsulas. Mankato, Minn.: Capstone Press. ISBN 0-7368-4308-6. OCLC .
  • . Boston: Houghton Mifflin. 2004. ISBN 978-0547350271. OCLC .
  • Wyckoff, Jerome (1999). Reading the Earth: Landforms in the Making. Mahwah, NJ: Adastra West. ISBN 0-9674075-0-8. OCLC .

External links

  • The dictionary definition of peninsula at Wiktionary