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| Heterohyus |
The biggest of these lay to the north, encompassing Scandinavia and the lands to the east. Just south of that, the second-largest was the one that would later become Britain, France, Germany, and some of their smaller neighbours. A smaller, but still sizable, Iberian island lay to the southwest, and a collection of low-lying ones occupied the south and east, with the more mountainous parts of that region having yet to form.
But, even if you didn't know the changes in the geography, if you could simply travel back in time to the Early Eocene and look around you, it wouldn't feel much like Europe. The continent was closer to the equator than it was now - northern Germany was about where Milan is today - but, even ignoring that, the world as a whole was much hotter. This is part of the reason for the islands, since there were no ice caps back then, but it means that our hypothetical time traveller would be, in almost any part of the landmass, standing in a jungle.

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