idont even know
The Continental drift
The breakup of the Pangea is a process that is continuing today. The Atlantic ocean is broadening, and the Pacific is shrinking at the rate of approximately an inch a year.
The breakup of Pangaea, in other words - the current theory.
Pangaea was present during the late Paleozoic and early Mesozoic eras. Its formation is dated to about 300 million years ago and its breakup began about 100 million years ago. The break-up of Pangaea is thought to have occurred in three phases, with the first beginning in the Early-Middle Jurassic Age. The second phase began in the Early Cretaceous Period and the third during the Early Cenozoic Period.
The earth is broken up into plates. Even when the world was called Pangaea, there were still plates. The plates begin to move, however, only about 1 cm a year. This is why we now have continents. Scientists predict that a few 100 years from now, the world will look even more different. If you type in the earths tech tonic plates into wikipedia, it might help you a little more than i did.
False, the breakup of Pangaea did not result in warm, wet global climates.
The continental droft
Alfred Wegener
The Continental drift
Evolution was not the cause of the breakup of Pangaea. Pangaea broke up by a process called rifting. Upwelling in Earth's mantle started to pull the conteinent apart. As the curst thinned, it led to the formation of volcanoes, which generated new crust, helping to push the continent apart. Evolution is the process by which groups of organisms change over time. While the breakup of Pangaea undoubtedly affected the course of evolution, evolution had nothing to do with causing the breakup.
Paleozoic
pangaea cause of breaking up was a rift that developed between eastern U.S. and Western Africa
age of reptiles
None, Antarctica has only drifted there in the last 200 million years, following the breakup of Pangaea.
no, scientists have recently concluded that a asteroid killed them
i heard that it was the exsistance and extinction of the dinosours and the continuing breakup of Pangaea
The breakup of the Pangea is a process that is continuing today. The Atlantic Ocean is broadening, and the Pacific is shrinking at the rate of approximately an inch a year.