Continental Drift
Their actual shapes are those of the Continental Slope outlines, but these generally and approximately follow the visible coasts at lesser or greater distances off-shore.
The shape of the continents is mainly due to water erosion.
Continental Drift Their actual shapes are those of the Continental Slope outlines, but these generally and approximately follow the visible coasts at lesser or greater distances off-shore.
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The continents are shaped the way they are because of erosion.
The continents look the way they do today due to the movement of tectonic plates over millions of years. Plate tectonics have caused the continents to drift apart, collide, or slide past each other, leading to the current configuration. This process also influences the shapes of coastlines and mountain ranges.
My opinion on this question is that its probably a pattern on earth. Maybe in millions of years the earth would look like pangea, then eventually back to how it is now and repeating.
Mostly. Although some positions will shift and Coastlines will change. However, it is not enough to be considered a difference.
The current shape and arrangement of continents is due to the movement of tectonic plates. Over millions of years, the plates have shifted, collided, and pulled apart, leading to the formation of the continents we see today. This process, known as plate tectonics, continues to shape the Earth's surface.
They look like that because they are all at different distances and have different elements in their atmospheres. Mars looks red because we see the rocky red surface, while on the other planets (except Mercury) we only see the top of a very thick layer of clouds.
Firstly, planets are way way smaller than the stars! That's because you can see stars in the night but never planets. Also stars produce nuclear energy in their core so they give thermal ( heat ) energy. Also stars have more gravity than planets.
what way? If you are referring to the way that the coast looks from afar there are theorists that believe that all the continents were one large land mass a few hundred million years ago. Over time these continents broke apart from each other. Due to this and the expansion and deterioration of different coast lines leaves us the way land looks the way it does today.