the circulation of convection cells in the mantle, which dragged against the lithosphere
The structure of the Earth relates to plate tectonics as in the Earth structure there is the mantle layer, crust layer, inner and outer layer etc. The crust layer on top of the Earth is not a solid layer, the layer the broke up into big chunks which are now called tectonic plates.
Tectonic Plates seperate what are now called Continents. Pangea was a time when all of the continents were together. The prediction came when scientist realized that Africa and South America fit together very well.
yes
About 200 million years ago,there were no crustal plates to speak of.There was only one supper continent,pangea.This was an idea suggested by Alfred Weneger, a german scientist.According to him,Pangea broke into pieces (crustal plates) and slowly moved until they reached their present position
what makes continents drift the land used to be a big long peace of land. then we started having these big earthquake and natural storms and started breaking the earths crust and finally broke threw and made massive peaces of land drift away and the other land locked in and that's how the continents drifted called (continental drift)
The parts that Pangaea broke into are called tectonic plates. These plates make up the Earth's lithosphere and float on the semi-fluid asthenosphere below, moving slowly and causing continental drift.
The process when Pangea broke apart is called continental drift or plate tectonics. It involved the gradual movement of the Earth's lithosphere plates, resulting in the separation of the once-connected landmasses that formed Pangea.
Pangaea broke apart due to plate tectonics, specifically the movement of the Earth's lithosphere plates. This movement caused the continents to drift apart over millions of years, eventually forming the continents as we know them today.
Continents and tectonic plates drifted to their present positions due to the process of plate tectonics. This movement is driven by the slow shifting of the Earth's lithosphere on the more fluid asthenosphere beneath it. The movement of these plates over millions of years has resulted in the present configuration of the continents and ocean basins.
I assume you mean "Meteor" and "Meteorites"
The theory of plate tectonics explains that Earth's lithosphere is divided into large plates that move and interact with each other. Millions of years ago, these plates were once all connected as one supercontinent called Pangaea. As the plates moved and shifted over time, Pangaea broke apart, leading to the formation of the continents we see today.
Pangaea broke up around 175 million years ago due to the movement of tectonic plates. This movement, known as continental drift, caused Pangaea to gradually separate into smaller landmasses that eventually formed the continents as we know them today.
Well the the molten layer pushed the tectonic plates apart splitting Africa to the South-east and pushing south America to the south-west when the molten layer was pushing the other plates you will see that the Continent's was looking like Today
The theory of plate tectonics explains that the Earth's lithosphere is divided into large plates that float on the semi-fluid asthenosphere. These plates move due to the heat-driven convective currents in the mantle. Continental drift is the movement of the continents across the Earth's surface over geologic time. The continents have shifted over time due to the movement of these tectonic plates, leading to the formation of supercontinents like Pangaea, which later broke apart into the continents we see today.
The single large continent that is believed to have existed around 200-300 million years ago is called Pangaea. It eventually broke apart due to the movement of tectonic plates, leading to the formation of the continents as we know them today.
When Pangaea broke apart, the tectonic plates underneath the Earth's surface shifted, causing the supercontinent to split up into the continents we have today. This movement of the plates created new oceans and changed the arrangement of landmasses on Earth.
The theory that suggests that the Earth was once a single supercontinent that gradually broke up into the continents we know today is called the theory of plate tectonics. This theory explains how the Earth's lithosphere is divided into large plates that move and interact with each other, leading to the shifting of continents over millions of years.