Yes.
Antartica was located at the southernmost part of Gondwana. Gondwana was the southern landmass of Pangaea. It consisted of the modern day continents Africa, South America, Australia, India, Arabia, Antarctica, and the European Balkans.
No. Antarctica is one of the modern continents. The continent the broke up in the Mesozoic was called Pangaea.
Antarctica was located near the South Pole 250 million years ago, as part of the supercontinent Pangaea. Over time, plate tectonics caused Pangaea to break apart and Antarctica to drift to its current location at the southern tip of the world.
Antarctica was part of Pangaea, dinosaurs crossed on to Antarctica while it was still connected. After a while the continents started to move and spread apart taking the dinosaurs with it.
Present-day land areas that were part of the supercontinent Pangaea include South America, Africa, Antarctica, Australia, India, and parts of Europe and North America. These landmasses were all connected together before the breakup of Pangaea.
During Pangaea, the continent that was located on the South Pole was likely Antarctica. Pangaea was a supercontinent that existed millions of years ago, and through the process of continental drift, the landmasses eventually split and moved to their current positions.
When Pangaea split in two, there where two island landmasses. The Northern landmass was Laurasia. The Southern landmass was Gondwanaland.
The GPS coordinates -66.553217, 99.838294 correspond to a location in East Antarctica, near the coastline of the Davis Sea. This area is often covered by ice and is part of the larger Pangaea supercontinent that existed millions of years ago.
No, the supercontinent that began to break apart about 225 million years ago is called Pangaea, not Antarctica. Antarctica is the southernmost continent on Earth, situated over the South Pole. Pangaea eventually broke apart to form the continents we know today.
No, that statement is not correct. The supercontinent that began to break apart about 225 million years ago is called Pangaea. Antarctica was part of Pangaea before it started to separate into the continents we have today.
It shows that Pangaea was a long continent that crossed the equator. Asia & North America then split from the other continent. Antarctica split off the rest.
The lower part of Pangaea refers to the southern supercontinent of Gondwana, which included what is now Antarctica, South America, Africa, Madagascar, Australia, the Arabian Peninsula, the Indian subcontinent, and possibly parts of Southeast Asia. Gondwana began to break apart during the Jurassic period, leading to the formation of the modern continents.