There was a time, a time when the continents sat on the top of the mantle, one of Earth's layers. The supercontinent Pangaea was sitting on the top of the mantle, too. Because of that, Pangaea was affected by a process called continental drift, which was discovered by Alfred Wegener in the 19th or 20th century. About 250 million years ago, Pangaea began to break apart, therefore splitting into Laurasia and Godwana. About 180 million years ago, Laurasia broke into North America, Greenland and Eurasia, while Godwana broke into South America, Africa, Arabia, Antarctica, India, and Australia.
A Pangaea plate is a Pangaea plate
Pangaea's
Another way to spell Pangaea is Pangea. Both spellings refer to the ancient supercontinent that existed approximately 335 million years ago.
Pangaea is from the Earth. It was always there
Pangaea is true because the continents are like a puzzle if you solve it right you get Pangaea
Pangaea gets its name because it's a greek word for "all Earth".
The term "Pangaea" comes from the Greek words "pan" meaning "all" and "gaea" meaning "Earth." It is used to refer to the supercontinent that existed around 300 million years ago when all the landmasses were joined together.
Yes if Pangaea was a supercontinent it has to be huge
pangaea
Pangaea don't no
No. Pangaea broke up long before humans evolved.
Go to google and search Pangaea