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South-East
Asia
South-East Asia is the least compact among the regions
of the Asian continent. Out of its total land surface,
estimated at four million sq.km., the mainland mass
has a share of only 40 per cent. The rest is accounted
for by several thousand islands of the Indonesian and
Philippine archipelagoes. Thus, it is composed basically
of insular and continental components. Nevertheless
the orographic features on both these landforms are
interrelated. This is due to the focal location of the
region where the two great axes, one of latitudinal
Cretaceo-Tertiary folding and the other of the longitudinal
circum-Pacific series, converge. This interface has
given a distinctive alignment to the major relief of
the region as a whole. In brief, the basic geological
structures that determine the trend of the mountains
are (a) north-south and north-east in the mainland interior,
(b) east-west along the Indonesian islands, and (c)
north-south across the Philippines. The mountain ranges
of the region are described in three geographic divisions:
the continental interior, peninsular, and insular (Figure
7 and Annex E).
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Figure 7: South-East Asia
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