It seems like there's a good number mising it.
Your browser's globe, in case you were curious:
^(*Firefox OS. The mozilla browser seems to be dependant on the computer's local font)
The Wallace line is super interesting. Wallace was the guy who discovered the theory of evolution by natural selection concurrently with Charles Darwin. Darwin was rushed into publishing Origin when it turned out that Wallace was about to publish a similar monograph on the same subject.
For various reasons, animals, even birds, tend to not cross the Wallace line. The strait there is exceptionally deep, so even lower seawater during ice ages didn't lower it enough to allow passage. The types of animals found on one side differ significantly from the types found on the other side.
Edit: Great book about biogeography, a field which Wallace more or less founded
It's a flat lamp though
Edit: Found a similar one
I was too curious, so I loaded the map, spawned in Sydney and console-command revealed the map... https://snipboard.io/nxw2rk.jpg
Result: NZ is there, the map is actually very, very detailed. It has Vanuatu and New Caledonia etc. According to the Mod page discussion, sounds like it was autogenerated from this http://www.naturalearthdata.com/downloads/10m-raster-data/10m-natural-earth-2/ which is very high quality on the scale of the whole world.... Anyways, I was interested... I might have to play this map one day, although it's freaking huge...
Samsung emojis are the worst. They are [guilty](https://emojipedia.org/samsung/experience-9.1/flag-for-nepal/) for r/BadNepaliFlags as well.
Don’t wanna be a spoil sport and ruin everyone’s fun but a lot of these have actually been fixed in later versions
https://emojipedia.org/earth-globe-asia-australia/
Although Google Samsung and SoftBank seem to have strange ideas about where NZ is or what it looks like 🙄
honestly what the hell is this lol https://emojipedia-us.s3.dualstack.us-west-1.amazonaws.com/thumbs/120/softbank/145/earth-globe-asia-australia_1f30f.png
I didn't actually read the article but here it is for those who want to read it.
(Turns out it's actually on some site called Pocket but Firefox says BBC because it's from BBC future)
I suggest the book The 10th Parallel, it talks about the history of the intersection of the Christian and Islamic worlds, and it aligns well with this map.