After Pangaea started breaking up, the continents drifted apart due to plate tectonics. Over millions of years, they moved to their current positions on the Earth's surface. This process created the continents and oceans as we see them today.
Pangaea was formed through the consolidation of all Earth's continents into a single supercontinent about 335 million years ago, during the late Paleozoic and early Mesozoic eras. The movement of tectonic plates caused the gradual merging of landmasses that eventually led to the formation of Pangaea.
Pangaea was a supercontinent that existed about 300 million years ago, when all the Earth's continents were joined together as a single landmass. The plates that make up the Earth's crust shifted over time, breaking apart Pangaea into the continents we know today.
Evidence of Pangaea includes the fit of the modern continents, similarities in rock formations across continents, distribution of fossils found on continents that were once part of Pangaea, and geological structures found in different continents that line up when Pangaea is reconstructed. Additionally, the mapping of ancient climate belts and glacial deposits provide further evidence of the supercontinent.
Pangaea, the supercontinent, split up due to the movement of tectonic plates. This movement caused the continents to drift apart over millions of years, leading to the formation of the current continents. The process is known as plate tectonics.
The current continents that made up Pangaea are North America, South America, Africa, Europe, Asia, Antarctica, and Australia. These continents were all once connected in the supercontinent Pangaea around 300 million years ago.
Pangaea was made up of the current major continents on Earth, where they were once combined in one continent.
The land mass that made up all the continents is called Pangaea. It was a supercontinent that existed millions of years ago before the continents drifted apart to their current positions.
It was made up of our land masses today but continental drift came and moved the continents
I think you are referring to Pangaea. Pangaea was the gigantic single continent that broke into the continents we have today. See the Related Link below for the Wikipedia entry.
Pangaea don't no
After Pangaea started breaking up, the continents drifted apart due to plate tectonics. Over millions of years, they moved to their current positions on the Earth's surface. This process created the continents and oceans as we see them today.
Pangaea was a supercontinent that existed around 335-175 million years ago. It was made up of all of Earth's continents joined together as a single landmass. Pangaea began to break apart due to the movement of tectonic plates, leading to the formation of the continents we have today.
Pangaea was all the continents. Gondwanaland (Gondwana) was made of Antarctica, Australia, South America and Africa. Laurasia was made of North America, Europe and Asia.
Pangea refers to one land mass made up of all the modern continents.
Pangaea was formed through the consolidation of all Earth's continents into a single supercontinent about 335 million years ago, during the late Paleozoic and early Mesozoic eras. The movement of tectonic plates caused the gradual merging of landmasses that eventually led to the formation of Pangaea.
Pangaea was a supercontinent that existed about 300 million years ago, when all the Earth's continents were joined together as a single landmass. The plates that make up the Earth's crust shifted over time, breaking apart Pangaea into the continents we know today.