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Alfred Wegener proposed the theory of continental drift in 1912, suggesting that continents were once connected and drifted apart over time. Pangaea refers to the supercontinent that existed around 300 million years ago when all landmasses were united. Panthalassa was the single large ocean surrounding Pangaea.
Pangaea was a supercontinent that existed around 335 million years ago and later split into the continents we have today. Panthalassa was the vast ocean surrounding Pangaea.
'Panthalassa' was the great sea that surrounded Pangea.
Pangaea was a supercontinent that existed about 300 million years ago, while Panthalassa was the global ocean surrounding Pangaea. Pangaea eventually broke apart into the continents we have today, while Panthalassa's remnants are today's Pacific Ocean.
During the time of the supercontinent Pangaea, the ocean known as Panthalassa surrounded Pangaea. Panthalassa was a vast ocean that covered most of the Earth's surface. As Pangaea broke apart, this single ocean eventually split into the modern oceans we have today.
That would be Alfred Wegener
Alfred Wegener proposed the theory of continental drift in 1912, suggesting that continents were once connected and drifted apart over time. Pangaea refers to the supercontinent that existed around 300 million years ago when all landmasses were united. Panthalassa was the single large ocean surrounding Pangaea.
Pangaea was a supercontinent that existed around 335 million years ago and later split into the continents we have today. Panthalassa was the vast ocean surrounding Pangaea.
Panthalassa.
'Panthalassa' was the great sea that surrounded Pangea.
Pangaea was a supercontinent that existed about 300 million years ago, while Panthalassa was the global ocean surrounding Pangaea. Pangaea eventually broke apart into the continents we have today, while Panthalassa's remnants are today's Pacific Ocean.
During the time of the supercontinent Pangaea, the ocean known as Panthalassa surrounded Pangaea. Panthalassa was a vast ocean that covered most of the Earth's surface. As Pangaea broke apart, this single ocean eventually split into the modern oceans we have today.
The Panthalassa Ocean surrounded Pangaea. It was the superocean that existed during the time of the supercontinent Pangaea, covering much of the Earth's surface.
The one major ocean in the time of Pangaea has been termed as Panthalassa.
Panthalassa means "all seas." It was the all the world's oceans that surrounded Pangaea before the continental drift occurred in the triassic period.
This massive body of water was called Panthalassa.
Alfred Wegener was a German weatherman (more specifically, a meteorologist at the University of Marburg) who wrote a book, "Die Entstehung der Kontinente und Ozeane," or "The Origin of Continents and Oceans" on the idea of Pangaea. This book came out in 1912 in Germany and 1915 in the USA, despite the First World War going on. Although Alfred Wegener is often recognized as being the originator of the idea of Pangaea, the American geologist Frank Bursley Taylor started theorizing about Pangaea in 1908. He did not, however, really go anywhere with this idea and didn't come up with the name "Pangaea". Alfred Wegener did.