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During the Tertiary period, the Earth's continents were continuing to drift apart due to plate tectonics. This movement led to the modern configuration of continents that we see today. The Tertiary period also saw dramatic shifts in climate and the diversification of mammals.
During the Tertiary period, Earth's continents were continuing to drift apart due to plate tectonics. This movement led to the formation of new mountain ranges and the reshaping of landmasses. The configuration of the continents during this time was closer to their current positions compared to earlier periods.
AsiaAfricaNorth AmericaSouth AmericaAntarcticaEuropeAustralia
A continent is one of several very large landmasses on Earth. They are generally identified by convention rather than any strict criteria, with seven regions commonly regarded as continents theyare (from largest in size to smallest
Continents arranged by land area:AsiaAfricaNorth AmericaSouth AmericaAntarcticaEuropeAustralia
During the Tertiary period, the Earth's continents were continuing to drift apart due to plate tectonics. This movement led to the modern configuration of continents that we see today. The Tertiary period also saw dramatic shifts in climate and the diversification of mammals.
During the Tertiary period, Earth's continents were continuing to drift apart due to plate tectonics. This movement led to the formation of new mountain ranges and the reshaping of landmasses. The configuration of the continents during this time was closer to their current positions compared to earlier periods.
It was very watery and all the continents were altogether as one land.A huge waste land
During the Quaternary time period, the continents were arranged in a similar configuration as today, but with some differences due to glacial periods causing sea levels to drop and connect landmasses across shallow seas. For example, Beringia connected Asia and North America, while sea levels were lower exposing more land bridges between continents.
All mammals present today are example of tertiary period mammals as we are living in tertiary period .
Earth's geography changed dramatically between the beginning and the end of the Tertiary. I could give you a long winded description, but I think you would prefer maps. Under "Related Links" there will be a map for the early Tertiary (called the Paleogene), and one for the later Tertiary (Neogene). P.S. The Tertiary began 65.5 million years ago and ended 2.6 million years ago.
It was very watery and all the continents were altogether as one land.A huge waste land
The "tertiary period" is not a place you can go to. It is a time period - in the remote past of Earth. Since it is in the past, you can't go there.
The k-t extinction was ~65million years ago and marks the transition from the Cretaceous to the Tertiary period.
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