We can't find any precise date or time for the event you anticipate.
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. Antarctica is one of the modern continents. The continent the broke up in the Mesozoic was called Pangaea.
Australia broke apart from Antarctica approximately 50-60 million years ago during the Eocene epoch. This separation marked the beginning of the formation of the Southern Ocean and the opening of the Tasman Sea.
how do mountains break apart
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.
Antarctica has not broken up.
erosion can break rocks apart, weathering can also break rocks apart
There are not many ways to break apart a compound. The best way to break apart a compound is to chemically separate it.
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.
That'd be Australia.
EVERYTHING DIES apart from the WEAGLE..
Platypuses and echidnas are each distinct species. They do not "break apart".