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Basically, it's a continent that wants to be really hard to find (you can find it if you try really, really hard). For example, if you got in a ship and wanted to sail to it you wouldn't be able to find it unless you were extremely lucky which is unlikely. The continent is around the size of South America in a world with 6 continents that is slightly bigger than Earth. It should be hidden not inaccessible as certain people can acess it if they know how. The time period is around 1700s.

Enny
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Antarctica, while not hidden, was essentially "protected" by ice shelfs until 1895 when the first human set foot on it. Thanks to the dangers posed to ships by ice shelfs, and a very unfriendly climate, most people still steer clear of it in 2018.

Your land mass could simply be surrounded treacherous ice, very dangerous looking rocks, etc.

EDIT:

The inhabitants of this land mass would either have to

1) Wait until they could build "ice-cutter" boats to become a seafaring nation(s)

2) The "ice people" would have to build something like the Japanese in the 1200s for the 2nd Mongol invasion, which was essentially a series of forts at every beach where a ship could land. The Japanese also had the help of Typhoons if they could keep an invading army at sea long enough.

Japan managed to hold off invaders until into the 20th century. Between "ice everywhere" and some sentries to pick off explorers you could likely keep your land mass the stuff of folk lore.

sevensevens
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  • Would the dangerous looking rocks have an impact on the inhabitants? – Enny Sep 28 '18 at 20:35
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    The reverse analogous situation was true for the continent overlying the North pole - thought to be there for centuries but actually nonexistent. https://zapatopi.net/blog/?post=201407156476.the_lost_continent_of_the_arctic. – Willk Sep 28 '18 at 22:39
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Under your current constraints: it's impossible

By the 1700s we were not only sailing everywhere, we were mapping everything. Let's assume for a moment that your continent was unapproachable as such a distance that sailors couldn't see land (for whatever reason). Now, calculating the distance between two above-sea-level objects is no small thing, but let's assume that at distances greater than 20Km, you can't see the continent.

It would take "no time at all" for a big blank spot to develop on the world maps with a pin in it holding a small flag with itty-bitty text neatly written in a beautiful caligraphy saying, "By the beneficence of Jove and King Horace there be wonder here!" or some such that would translate to, "what the heck is here?"

So, while the details of your continent would be unknown, the fact that a continent-sized swath of ocean is unknown would be the worst-kept secret on the planet.

And every sailor out there would be hungry to figure out what's there.

Conclusion #1 You can't hide the existence of something the size of a continent.

so, let's ask ourselves, what could keep the average sailor from knowing about it? Reefs, ocean shelves, sandbars, fog... the problem with continent-sized problems is that there aren't continent-sized solutions. Unless you throw realism out the window and hold to magic/fantasy, there is nothing that can keep a fog bank around an entire continent. There's too much distance. Too much change of climate from one side to the other.

Consider South America. On one side is the angry, hurricane-laden Atlantic Ocean. On the other, the benign and comfortable Pacific Ocean. So, storms and other climate-related solutions are out, even in part. They're not permanent. They change based on the local ocean, sunlight, landscape, etc. etc....

Things in the water are out, too. Reefs wear down or build up. Storms break them. Shallow water is overcome with oars and shallow drafts. They're inconvenient, but not insurmountable. Worse... around an entire continent? No.

Conclusion #2 Continent-sized problems require continent-sized solutions after all.

So, let's not hide the fact that there's a continent there, let's hide simply hide the interior of the continent. Suddenly that little flag reads, "By the beneficence of Jove and King Horace there be dirt here! Be there gold?"1

So, let's build a ring of fire: volcanoes. Basically, let's create a continent that's one big unstable tectonic plate, and the world is bursting out around it. It's not fog that's curtaining the continent... it's ash. Lots of it. And it's a recent development such that the magma flows and ash haven't had enough time to build up new coastline that's outside the pyroclastic cloud.

This is hard to believe... but it's plausible. It's also on the clock. All that magma and ash will begin to build up new coastline — and fairly quickly (tens of years, IMO).

So, everybody knows it's a continent because volcanos are well known... but it's a formidable ring of volcanos. Even if you know how to approach the continent... you'll need Maui's help to get past the volcanos.

Conclusion #3 You shouldn't try to hide the continent. That's impossible. No one in the 1700s would suddenly slap their foreheads and exclaim, "you mean there's a continent there?" You should make the continent unapproachable. The secret isn't its existence, but how to step foot on its interior safely. And I'm voting for volcanos to make that happen. Or dinosaurs.


1I'm a Terry Pratchett fan, so this was necessary. Very necessary.

JBH
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    "what the heck is here?" Terra Incognita? – RonJohn Sep 28 '18 at 22:08
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    "The secret isn't its existence, but how to step foot on its interior safely." That's "right", but it only works for relatively small volcanic islands. Continents, though, as you know, are so big that there will be some beach somewhere that the ships can land on. – RonJohn Sep 28 '18 at 22:12
  • @RonJohn, Aaaah... fiction. A continental ring of active volcanoes constantly spewing ash and magma. Alan Quartermaine may be able to get in, but no one else would. So say we all! – JBH Sep 28 '18 at 23:51
  • unapproachable as such a distance that sailors couldn't see land (for
  • whatever reason)*

    And that's assuming earth is FLAT wink

    – Mr.J Sep 28 '18 at 23:52
  • @Mr.J, right back atcha! https://worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/69741/how-could-there-be-a-horizon-on-a-flat-earth – JBH Sep 29 '18 at 00:21
  • @JBH And I thought Flat earth has no horizon, but this a bit different, specially the answer... And you just gave flatearthers an idea. – Mr.J Sep 29 '18 at 00:29
  • You say you read discworld, then forget to copy fourecks? – Tanzanite Dragoness Dec 05 '18 at 14:32