Topology of the United States.
At a gross resolution, just considering the land area, the United States has three disconnected parts:
{Alaska, Hawai'i, mainland}
.
The complement of the United States is a connected space with a genus of three.
At a finer resolution you would measure a much higher genus. (Does Lake Tahoe count as a “hole” in the mainland US? What about Lake Winnibigoshish?) The Aleutian islands would all register as separate from Alaska, as would the parts of Hawai'i and even Nantucket. So at a fine resolution the complement of the land area of the United States would have a genus well over 100.
For the UK & Ireland, again it depends on resolution. At a gross scale we could simply talk about two islands but that would leave off Orkney, Man, Guernsey, Jersey, the Hebrides, Skelligs, Ione, Skye, Shetlands, and many more.
According to various Ordnance Surveyors in the Daily Mail (1995):
- Our 1:625,000 scale database shows Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales) has a total
6,289
islands, mostly in Scotland. Of these, 803
are large enough to have been ‘digitised’ with a coastline by our map-makers. The rest are recorded as point features
- The 1:250,000 scale map of Northern Ireland shows
160
islands; 57 offshore.
- Our 1:250,000 map of the Republic of Ireland has
279
offshore islands.
So, at fine resolution, the genus of the complement
|∁ {UK}∪{Ireland}| = 6289
and at a coarser scale, the genus of the complement of the isles is 803
.
(Source: Wikipedia)