Pangea was a huge landmass made of all the continents today. Tectonic plates in the Earth moved, causing it to split apart.
The plate tectonics are the mechanisms that started to drift Pangaea (super continent) into separate continents 200billion years ago into the continents we have today. :D
The Pangaea super-continent no longer exists because it has broken up into the continents that exist today, as a result of continental drift caused by convection currents in the earth's mantle.
The movement of the plates that formed Pangaea was primarily driven by the process of plate tectonics. The heat generated from the Earth's core creates convection currents in the mantle, which in turn move the plates that make up the Earth's outer shell. This movement led to the breakup of Pangaea and the shifting of the continents to their current positions.
At one point in history, the continents were joined together as a supercontinent called Pangaea. Over time, the movement of tectonic plates caused the continents to drift apart to form the world map we know today.
Pangaea
Continental Drift caused pangaea to seperate.
Plate Tectonics. Plate Tectonics are the sub-layers that lie underneath the Earth's surface. They can rub against together, smash together, or pull away from each other. This is what caused Pangaea to separate.
pangaea
Pangaea separated due to a shift of the tectonic plates, causing the seven continents to form. Geological activity caused the granite crust to separate at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge causing a continental cataclysm that caused the continents to move away from the Ridge toward the opposing side of each continents respective tectonic plates at incredible speeds, forming the mountain ranges.
Laurasia and Gondwana -finncarls
When Pangaea first started to separate, two large landmasses formed: Laurasia in the north and Gondwana in the south.
The breakup of Pangaea occurred due to the movement of tectonic plates. Over millions of years, the immense forces of plate tectonics caused Pangaea to gradually break apart into separate continents that drifted away from each other. This process resulted in the formation of the continents as we know them today.
Pangaea broke apart due to the movement of tectonic plates, which caused the supercontinent to gradually split into separate landmasses. This shift in the Earth's crust created the Atlantic Ocean as it is today and reshaped the continents into their current positions.
Continental drift caused Pangaea, the supercontinent, to break apart into separate landmasses over millions of years. This movement resulted in the creation of the continents we know today and influenced the formation of oceans and mountain ranges.
Pangaea, the supercontinent that existed around 335 million years ago, began breaking apart due to the movement of tectonic plates. This movement resulted in the formation of separate continents over millions of years through the process of continental drift. Gradually, the forces of plate tectonics caused Pangaea to split into the continents we have today.
When the idea of Pangaea was created, continental drift, which is the movement of continents relative to each other across the ocean bed, was used to explain the separation of landmasses. However, the prevailing theory of how Pangaea was split into separate continents is explained with plate tectonics. This newer theory takes seismic activity into account and also utilizes data collected from seismologic stations.
The plate boundaries underneath started the separate Pangaea into seven different continents as well as seven different plates