Evidence of past glaciations have nothing to do with evolution except to show that the Earth is much older than 10,000 years old.
A hypothesis is a statement of theory. Something that is unproven. You gather evidence to support that theory. Gather enough evidence to support and a theory becomes accepted as fact.
Fossils support his hypothesis.
Wegener used several pieces of evidence to support his theory of continental drift, including the jigsaw-like fit of the continents, matching geological formations across continents, similarities in fossils found on different continents, and evidence of past glaciation in regions that are now closer to the equator.
Alfred Wegener used several pieces of evidence to support his theory of continental drift, including the fit of continents like South America and Africa, similarities in rock formations and fossils across continents, and the matching of ancient climate indicators like glaciation patterns. Despite facing initial skepticism, Wegener's evidence paved the way for the development of the theory of plate tectonics.
Many lines of converging evidence.
yes
Personal beliefs and opinions are not a kind of evidence used to support evolutionary theory. Scientific evidence such as fossil records, DNA analysis, and observational data are the main sources of evidence.
Glaciation
Alfred Wegener used several lines of evidence to support his theory of continental drift, including the fit of the continents like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle, similarities in rock formations and fossils across continents, as well as evidence of past glaciation patterns and ancient climate belts that only made sense if the continents were once connected.
Wegener used several lines of evidence to support his theory of continental drift, including the fit of the continents like a jigsaw puzzle, similarities in rock formations and fossils across continents, matching mountain ranges on different coastlines, and evidence of past glaciation patterns. These observations suggested that the continents were once joined together in a supercontinent called Pangaea and had drifted apart over time.
A conspiracy theory with no evidence to support it at all.
No. There is no scientific evidence to support this theory.