Pangaea is believed to have been a supercontinent that included all of the continents we know today in one giant landmass.
A web address where an approximate picture of what Pangaea may have looked like can be found at the related link below. The "map" located at this link includes the countries as they are now, in order to show the original makeup of the continents.
Wegener deduced what Pangaea looked like by identifying matching geological formations, fossils, and rock types across continents. He noticed that the coastlines of continents fit together like a jigsaw puzzle and suggested that they were once connected as a single supercontinent, which he named Pangaea. By analyzing these pieces of evidence, Wegener proposed that Pangaea existed around 300 million years ago.
The Earth's tectonic plates are constantly moving due to convection currents in the mantle, causing them to drift over millions of years. This movement has gradually separated the supercontinent Pangaea into the continents we see 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.
When Pangaea existed, all the Earth's continents were connected into one massive supercontinent. The landmass was surrounded by a single large ocean called Panthalassa. The climate was much different than today, with a more uniform distribution of temperatures and weather patterns across the Earth.
If Pangaea were to reform, it would lead to major geological shifts, such as the merging of continents, changes in ocean currents, and disruptions to ecosystems. This could result in extreme climate changes, biodiversity loss, and challenges for human populations in terms of migration and resource distribution.
Go to google and search Pangaea
it looks like this.
AMAZING.
The continents look like that because they use to be a SUPER-CONTINENT called PANGAEA.
Pretty much like ours, with different plants and creatures.
a bit like the continents now just closer and twisted
Pangaea was like that when the earth was created by the BIG BANG
190 million years ago, Pangaea was in the process of breaking apart, leading to the formation of the current continents. At this time, Pangaea would have looked like one large supercontinent with most of Earth's landmasses fused together.
Approximately 300 million years ago, the Earth's continents were joined together in a supercontinent known as Pangaea. Over time, Pangaea split apart to form the continents as we recognize them today.
Pangaea was a supercontinent about 300 million years ago, comprising nearly all of Earth's landmasses. It had a single large landmass surrounded by a single ocean. The continents were clustered together, forming a giant landmass.
Pangea does not exist anymore so it cannot be seen from space. However when it did exist it might have looked vaguely like the image above.
Pangaea is a "SUPPER CONTINENT" THIS WAS THE EARTH LIKE 250 MILLIONS years ago. Pangaea was separated, because all of the natural causes of the earth. :)