Because identical fossils were found on two continents far apart, it suggested that at one time the two landmasses were joined together. In other cases of lands separated by far less distance, plants did not propagate across the divide.
His evidence was incorrect.
Because identical fossils were found on two continents far apart, it suggested that at one time the two landmasses were joined together. In other cases of lands separated by far less distance, plants did not propagate across the divide.
One day while scientists were exploring the sea floor, they discovered sea-floor spreading, thus proving Wegener's hypothesis to be correct.
evidence supporting the idea of sea-floor spreading.
plate tectonics
Glossopteris, a seed fern found in fossil records across several continents, played a crucial role in Alfred Wegener's hypothesis of continental drift. Its widespread distribution in now-separated landmasses, such as South America, Africa, Antarctica, and Australia, provided evidence that these continents were once joined. The presence of Glossopteris in these diverse locations suggested that they must have been connected in a single landmass, which Wegener named Gondwana. This fossil evidence supported his argument for the movement of continents over geological time.
Fossils support his hypothesis.
yes it does.
because it just is
Wegener's hypothesis of continental drift was largely rejected due to a lack of a plausible mechanism to explain how continents could move across the Earth's surface. He proposed that continents plowed through the oceanic crust, which seemed implausible to many scientists. Additionally, his ideas conflicted with the prevailing theories of the time, such as land bridges and static continents. The discovery of plate tectonics in the 1960s eventually provided the necessary mechanisms for continental movement, validating Wegener's ideas long after their initial rejection.
The scientific means for proving his hypothesis had not yet been developed.
The continental Coastlines fit together like puzzle pieces, fossils, and glacier Grover in warm places