...some mountains that I am trying to find out what they are called using this website and I can't seem to find it. I think I just found it on a map though; and I think they are called the Atlas Mountains, but I am not sure. I do know that scientists say that Africa collided with Europe millions of years ago and it's named after that guy they say holds the world on his shoulders. Also it's highest peek is Mount Toubka. Hope that helps.=]
Europe, Africa and Antarctica.
It passes through Africa, Europe and Antarctica.
Crowders Mountain is part of the Appalachians, which formed during the Alleghenian Orogeny. The mountains formed when the continents of the time, Euramerica and Gondwana, collided to form the supercontinent Pangaea. The sections of the continents that collided correspond to the modern continents of Africa and North America.
no it was created when the eurasian plate and the pacific plate collided
The Indian subcontinent broke off from Africa over a hundred million years ago. It then moved to the southern coast of Asia. When it collided with Asia, the formation of the Himalaya began.
Atlas Mountains
How Europe Underdeveloped Africa was created in 1972.
The Atlas Mountains. They formed when Africa's and Europe's tectonic plates collided. That also formed the Mediterranean Sea and the Alps.
the different continentss started to move around a lot and sometimes they ran into one another pushing up land or leaving big chunks of land creating huge mountains for example the alps were created when Africa collided with Europe
No, it's India. When it collided with Eurasia, it formed the Himalayan Mountains.
south america and africa .
Africa and North America
Europe is North of Africa
it was created when two tectonic plates collided.....
The Atlas Mountains were formed during three different stages. The first phase was formed during the Paleozoic Era when Africa and North America collided. The second phase was formed during the Mesozoic Era when the earth's crust rifted and separated the continents. Finally, in the Paleogene and Neogene Periods, the mountains were uplifted as the land masses of Europe and Africa collided at the southern end of the Iberian peninsula.
No, Africa is to the south of Europe
No, Africa is to the south of Europe