When continents break apart and the landmasses separate, it is called continental drift or plate tectonics.
Yes, millions of years ago, the 7 continents were part of a supercontinent called Pangaea. Over time, the continents drifted apart due to plate tectonics, creating the separate landmasses we see today.
Around 300 million years ago, all continents were part of one supercontinent called Pangaea. Over time, Pangaea broke apart into the landmasses we now know as the continents.
When continents break apart into separate land masses, it is called continental drift or plate tectonics. This process is driven by the movement of the Earth's lithospheric plates.
Landmasses were split into separate continents through the process of plate tectonics. This involves the movement of Earth's lithosphere (the outer layer of the Earth) on tectonic plates. These plates can collide, move apart, or slide past each other, leading to the formation of continents and ocean basins over millions of years.
When continents break apart into separate land masses, it is called continental drift. This process is driven by the movement of tectonic plates in the Earth's lithosphere.
continental drift
Continental Drift
When continents break apart into separate land masses, it is called continental drift. This process is driven by the movement of tectonic plates in the Earth's lithosphere.
The theory of Pangea. It has somthing to do the a shift in the techtonic plates that caused the landmasses to separate I do believe.
the EOHIPPUS lived in Asia and north America
Plates pulling apart.
The Pangea puzzle is the theory of the beginning of the continents. It's how the Earth started out. Well it is the theory of how the continents came to be. The legend has it that way back in time, there weren't any continents. There was just one large landmass. Until it started to spread apart. That is when it was no longer just one piece. But there were 7 different landmasses. Over hundreds of thousands of years, those landmasses spread apart into what we know now as our 7 continents.
The ancient continent that contained all of the landmasses is called Pangaea. It existed during the Late Paleozoic and early Mesozoic eras, approximately 300 to 175 million years ago. Over time, the landmasses drifted apart and formed the continents we have today.
Midocean ridges are areas where continents broke apart. Midocean ridges are closest to the landmasses in younger oceans. One example where a midocean ridge intersected a landmass is the Arabian sea, which was formed by the pulling apart of the Arabian Peninsula and Africa.
Actually, Pangaea was all the continents smashed together. But, the two continents that broke apart after Pangaea was created were named "Gondwanaland" and "Laurasia".
Continental Drift
The action of continents drifting apart from each other is called, "Continental Drift". It is no longer a theory, as it has been proven to be so. Of course, as certain continents move apart from each other, they also are moving closer to other continents.