A modern day map would do the trick. Alfred Wegener's theory of continental drift is also a factor, which explains that the continents are constantly shifting and that their positions have differed throughout time.
closer
because the plates shifted and there are earthquakes for millions of years
Geographers refer to the movement of continents over millions of years as "continental drift." This theory, proposed by Alfred Wegener in the early 20th century, states that the Earth's continents were once joined together in a single supercontinent and have since drifted apart to their current positions.
Yes they were all once connected together and formed the supercontinent Pangaea, Pangaea split apart over millions of years and today it has reached a point where it has been split up into 7 continents.
one big block of land
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No, the continents and the oceans have not always been in the positions they are in today. The Earth's tectonic plates slowly move over time through a process called plate tectonics. This movement has resulted in the continents shifting positions and the reshaping of the oceans over millions of years.
because the plates shifted and there are earthquakes for millions of years
An example of a Pangea is the earth. The continents were all part of a supercontinent hundreds of millions of years ago. Once the continents split, there were 7 continents that we know today.
Geographers refer to the movement of continents over millions of years as "continental drift." This theory, proposed by Alfred Wegener in the early 20th century, states that the Earth's continents were once joined together in a single supercontinent and have since drifted apart to their current positions.
It's not just "today"; basically they were always slow. It takes millions of years for continents to change to a significantly different position.
Pangaea, which was the supercontinent made out of all of today's continents joined together. It existed 250 millions years ago.
Continental drift is the concept that the world's continents once were a single mass and have since drifted to their present positions.
Mostly. Although some positions will shift and Coastlines will change. However, it is not enough to be considered a difference.
floaties
No, not currently. The continents won't change for hundreds of millions of years as they move extremely slowly.
No. Modern humans evolved just some tens of thousands or a hundred thousand years ago, so millions of years ago there were no humans to populate the continents.