Alfred Wegener
When all the continents were joined together as one supercontinent, it was called Pangaea.
When all the continents fit together into one big continent, we call that Pangaea.
When all the continents are stuck together, it is called a supercontinent. The most recent supercontinent is known as Pangaea.
The name for all the continents put together is "supercontinent." The most recent supercontinent was Pangaea, which existed about 300 million years ago.
Wegener named his supercontinent "Pangaea," which means "all lands" in Greek. He proposed the theory of Pangaea to explain how the continents once fit together and have since drifted apart due to plate tectonics.
When all the continents were joined together as one supercontinent, it was called Pangaea.
Pangaea. It was known as the supercontinent.
When all the continents fit together into one big continent, we call that Pangaea.
When all the continents are stuck together, it is called a supercontinent. The most recent supercontinent is known as Pangaea.
The name for all the continents put together is "supercontinent." The most recent supercontinent was Pangaea, which existed about 300 million years ago.
Alfred Wegener proposed the theory of continental drift, suggesting that all the continents were once connected in a single supercontinent he named Pangaea.
Wegener named his supercontinent "Pangaea," which means "all lands" in Greek. He proposed the theory of Pangaea to explain how the continents once fit together and have since drifted apart due to plate tectonics.
The theory of Pangaea was proposed by Alfred Wegener in 1912. Wegener suggested that the continents were once connected in a supercontinent known as Pangaea and have since drifted apart.
Wegener named the supercontinent he proposed "Pangaea," which he believed existed before breaking apart into the continents we have today. The name "Pangaea" is derived from Greek, meaning "all lands."
Alfred Wegener named the supercontinent he proposed "Pangaea," which means "all lands" in Greek. He suggested that Pangaea began to break apart around 200 million years ago, eventually forming the continents we are familiar with today.
Yes, approximately 300 million years ago, all the continents were connected into one supercontinent called Pangaea. This supercontinent eventually broke apart into the continents we have today.
Alfred Wegener, a German meteorologist and geophysicist, first proposed the theory of Pangaea and Panthalassa in the early 20th century. He suggested that the continents were once joined together in a supercontinent called Pangaea, surrounded by a single large ocean known as Panthalassa.