. A regional geography of the world, with diagrams and entirely new maps . -402403-41I413-416417-420421-423 PART VI SOUTH AMERICA 426-464 1. General Physical Conditions . 426-434 2. The Natural Regions of South America . 434-446 3. The Countries of South America . 447-463 PART VII AFRICA 1. General Physical Conditions 2. The Atlas Region . 3. The Sahara, with Tripoli 4. The Nile Lands 5. The Eastern Horn . 465-518465-470 470-473473-476476-482482-485 CONTENTS PAGES AFRICA (continued)- , 6. The Sudan 486-488 7. Upper Guinea 489-492 8. Lower Guinea 492-495 9. The Congo Basin . 495-498 10. The Pla


. A regional geography of the world, with diagrams and entirely new maps . -402403-41I413-416417-420421-423 PART VI SOUTH AMERICA 426-464 1. General Physical Conditions . 426-434 2. The Natural Regions of South America . 434-446 3. The Countries of South America . 447-463 PART VII AFRICA 1. General Physical Conditions 2. The Atlas Region . 3. The Sahara, with Tripoli 4. The Nile Lands 5. The Eastern Horn . 465-518465-470 470-473473-476476-482482-485 CONTENTS PAGES AFRICA (continued)- , 6. The Sudan 486-488 7. Upper Guinea 489-492 8. Lower Guinea 492-495 9. The Congo Basin . 495-498 10. The Plateau of the Great Lakes . 498-504 11. Africa, South of the Zambezi . . 504-514 12. African Islands 514-517 PART VIII AUSTRALASIA 5^9-557 1. Australia: General Physical Conditions, ETC. . 519-528 2. Queensland 528-530 3. New South Wales 530-533 4. Victoria 533-535 5. South Australia (with Northern Terri- tory) 536-537 6. Western Australia 537-538 7. Tasmania 539-540 8. New Guinea 540-541 9. New Zealand , . 541-549 10. The Pacific Islands 550-556 Index 558-560. PART I THE MAJOR NATURALREGIONS OF THE WORLD In the first three volumes of this series we havesurveyed the regions of the world in some detail. Weare thus in a position, at the outset of our presentstudies, to co-ordinate our knowledge by taking thewhole world as a great unit, and by dividing it intogroups of regions, so that in each group the variousregions which comprise it have certain importantcharacteristics that enable them, for our present purposeat least, to be considered together. Incidentally, weshall also be able to revise, and to supplement, ourknowledge of general world geography. It is of greatimportance that we should visualize the world, not as acollection of separate states loosely related to each other,but as a single great organism in which all the variousparts have their function to perform, in which each partmakes its own peculiar contribution, and in which allact and re-act upon each. First we must be


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