Pangea consisted of Laurasia (Laurentia and Eurasia) and Gondwana.
y euglena is called the connecting link between plants and animal
money
Yes. 160 million years ago, New Zealand, Australia and Antarctica were one continent, Gondwana. Very slowly they separated into three. New Zealand was one island up till about one million years ago. There's a good animation at the link below.
Tempatures during the Permian period would have been cooler because of continental drift of Pangea toward the northern parts of the globe. The conditions are also considered to be dry during this time period, where animals had to adapt to the climate becoming less water-based.
Any link between tourism and chemistry.
Antartica was located at the southernmost part of Gondwana. Gondwana was the southern landmass of Pangaea. It consisted of the modern day continents Africa, South America, Australia, India, Arabia, Antarctica, and the European Balkans.
Type in Eurasia on google.com and it will give you the map!
See link for further information
Its mostly in asia but some of it is in europe- Check out the link below
There seems to be a confusion in your question. "Woad" is a plant used to produce blue dye, while "Pangaea" refers to the ancient supercontinent that existed around 335 million years ago. There is no direct link or definition between the two terms.
I think you are referring to Pangaea. Pangaea was the gigantic single continent that broke into the continents we have today. See the Related Link below for the Wikipedia entry.
there formed by Pangaea a word created by Alfred Wegner
Pangaea was a supercontinent about 300 million years ago, comprising nearly all of Earth's landmasses. It had a single large landmass surrounded by a single ocean. The continents were clustered together, forming a giant landmass.
Pangaea is believed to have been a supercontinent that included all of the continents we know today in one giant landmass. A web address where an approximate picture of what Pangaea may have looked like can be found at the related link below. The "map" located at this link includes the countries as they are now, in order to show the original makeup of the continents.
200 million years ago, during the Triassic period of the Mesozoic era, the continents were joined together in a supercontinent known as Pangaea. This supercontinent later began to break apart, leading to the formation of Laurasia in the north and Gondwana in the south.
The Levantine Corridor is a geographic region in the Middle East, stretching from the eastern Mediterranean coast to the Tigris-Euphrates river system. It serves as a vital link between Africa and Eurasia for human migration and trade.
there is not a link between