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A continent is what floats on top of the plate. There are continental and oceanic plates. The continents float on the continental plate and the ocean sits on the oceanic plate. But there are also plates that carry both continents and oceans. The plates are what causes continental drift. So basically plates are what carry the continents and oceans.
The existence in the fossil record of the same land species on several continents. Since these animals are not seafaring then the continents must have been connected at one time. Also continental drift is supported by vast empirical evidence.
In the past climate change has been a very short-term thing compared with continental drift. The have been several ice-ages in the last 100,000 years, and the continents have drifted imperceptibly in that period. On a scale of 100s of millions of years then continents drifting towards or away from the poles will of course see very slowly changing climate over that very long period.
No. Many plate boundaries are on the seafloor far from continents and several are well within continents.
Pangaea or Pangea was the super-continent in the continental drift hypothesis.
fossils and rocks.
Similar fossils on several continents supports the theory of continental drift. The same animal fossils, or similar ones have been found on many continents supporting the Pangea theory.
A continent is what floats on top of the plate. There are continental and oceanic plates. The continents float on the continental plate and the ocean sits on the oceanic plate. But there are also plates that carry both continents and oceans. The plates are what causes continental drift. So basically plates are what carry the continents and oceans.
The existence in the fossil record of the same land species on several continents. Since these animals are not seafaring then the continents must have been connected at one time. Also continental drift is supported by vast empirical evidence.
Intermediate forms are predicted by evolutionary science in several ways. Their presence supports the theory of evolution.
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In the past climate change has been a very short-term thing compared with continental drift. The have been several ice-ages in the last 100,000 years, and the continents have drifted imperceptibly in that period. On a scale of 100s of millions of years then continents drifting towards or away from the poles will of course see very slowly changing climate over that very long period.
Countries are smaller than continents. Continents contain several countries.
No. Many plate boundaries are on the seafloor far from continents and several are well within continents.
this supercontinent is called PANGEA. it is the greek word for "all lands".
No, the surface changes. Erosion from rain and wind will gradually make mountain ranges lower; continents move; this movement creates new mountains, as the continental plates push against each other. For example, several million years ago, most continents were together, in one supercontinent, "Pangaea". I suggest you read an encyclopedia (e.g., en.wikipedia.org) article about plate tectonics; also about Pangaea or Pangea.No, the surface changes. Erosion from rain and wind will gradually make mountain ranges lower; continents move; this movement creates new mountains, as the continental plates push against each other. For example, several million years ago, most continents were together, in one supercontinent, "Pangaea". I suggest you read an encyclopedia (e.g., en.wikipedia.org) article about plate tectonics; also about Pangaea or Pangea.No, the surface changes. Erosion from rain and wind will gradually make mountain ranges lower; continents move; this movement creates new mountains, as the continental plates push against each other. For example, several million years ago, most continents were together, in one supercontinent, "Pangaea". I suggest you read an encyclopedia (e.g., en.wikipedia.org) article about plate tectonics; also about Pangaea or Pangea.No, the surface changes. Erosion from rain and wind will gradually make mountain ranges lower; continents move; this movement creates new mountains, as the continental plates push against each other. For example, several million years ago, most continents were together, in one supercontinent, "Pangaea". I suggest you read an encyclopedia (e.g., en.wikipedia.org) article about plate tectonics; also about Pangaea or Pangea.
A continent is one of several large landmasses located on EarthThere are seven continents;North AmericaSouth AmericaAsiaEuropeAfricaAntarcticaAustraliaOceania or Australasia are considered regions, or "quasi-continents", that consist of several islandsthat are not, geography-speaking, part of the 7 continents.