Pangea broke into Gondwanaland and Laurasia.
Pangea split into two supercontinents, Laurasia and Gondwana. Laurasia includes the core of the North America, Asia (without India) and Europe (without the Balkans) Gondwana composed most of Africa, South America, Australia, India, Arabia, Antarctica and the Balkans.
Rodinia is the super continent that existed before Pangea.
No, the continents are not moving back into the form of Pangea. The movement of the Earth's tectonic plates is complex and constantly changing. While some continents are moving closer together due to plate tectonics, the formation of a new supercontinent similar to Pangea is not predicted in the near future.
Pangaea was a supercontinent that existed about 335 million years ago, and it included almost all of Earth's landmasses joined together. It had a distinctive single landmass configuration, with some of the current continents as we know them today joined into one large landmass.
A supercontinent is one giant landmass formed from several different continents coming together through plate tectonics. The supercontinent is surrounded by one giant ocean. A famous example of a supercontinent is Pangea, although there were others before it.
When Pangea split, the landmass separated into two supercontinents called Laurasia and Gondwana. Over time, these supercontinents further fragmented into the continents we recognize today. The splitting of Pangea resulted in the formation of new oceans and reshaped Earth's geography and ecosystems.
Pangea split into two supercontinents, Laurasia and Gondwana. Laurasia includes the core of the North America, Asia (without India) and Europe (without the Balkans) Gondwana composed most of Africa, South America, Australia, India, Arabia, Antarctica and the Balkans.
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The first land masses were called supercontinents, with the most recent one being Pangaea. These supercontinents formed and broke apart over millions of years due to the movement of tectonic plates on Earth's surface.
Well, I'm not an expert but it's a question that's still up in the air. You could argue that Gondwana or Laurasia were before Pangea but we still can't be 100%. My person opinion would be no, Pangea was not the first supercontinent, but you could argue that Pangea could be the first supercontinent because of the big lapse in time between all of the supercontinents, but again, my opinion would be no.
The answe is Pangea because it was a supercontinent and existed 225 million years ago
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Perhaps you mean 200 million years ago? This supercontinent was Pangea.
Pangea is not a language. Pangea is a massive supercontinent.
It is estimated that Earth's continents have come together to form a super-continent around three times in the last 600 million years. This cycle of continents coming together and then breaking apart is known as the supercontinent cycle. Examples of supercontinents include Pangea, Rodinia, and Columbia.