India is not at the equator, though it is located at a latitude generally associated with warm climate. The glaciers of India are in the Himalayas, the tallest mountain range in the world. No matter the latitude, it is always cold at high elevation. Even at the equator, the air more than 5 kilometers above sea level is almost always below freezing. Temperatures in the Himalayas are certainly low enough to support the formation of glaciers.
India wasn't always near the equator. Infancy India was its own continent before crashing into Asia, creating the Hymilayas, home of the tallest mountains. But before India collided with Asia, it was very close to the south pole, which is cold. And the presence of glaciers is still there today. The actual glaciers melted away, but the path they left behind is still there, and that is what scientists are looking at.
No. The last glaciers in Pennsylvania melted about 12,000 years ago.
Glaciers provide evidence for the existence of Pangaea through glacial deposits and striations found in regions now located near the equator, such as Africa, South America, and India. These remnants indicate that these continents were once situated closer to the poles, where glacial activity could occur. Additionally, the alignment of rock layers and the presence of similar glacial features across continents support the idea of these landmasses being part of a single supercontinent. This evidence aligns with the theory of continental drift, which suggests that Pangaea existed around 335 million years ago.
glaciers are big and vary cold.
Yes, Mount Kilimanjaro does have snow and ice on its summit despite being close to the equator. However, the glaciers on the mountain have been shrinking in recent years due to climate change.
At one point the tectonic plates moved the glaciers to the equator. That's how the glaciers moved.
it has evidence of these glaciers because of the existence of Pangea.In the diagram that scientists believe Pangea was India Was Connected to the South Pole meaning it would have evidence of having glaciers on it
India wasn't always near the equator. Infancy India was its own continent before crashing into Asia, creating the Hymilayas, home of the tallest mountains. But before India collided with Asia, it was very close to the south pole, which is cold. And the presence of glaciers is still there today. The actual glaciers melted away, but the path they left behind is still there, and that is what scientists are looking at.
359 Mya (million years ago)
there is scientifical evedence to prove that approximately eight million years ago the present location of the equator was the north pole, and another "pole shift" is on the way!!
No. The last glaciers in Pennsylvania melted about 12,000 years ago.
Glaciers provide evidence for the existence of Pangaea through glacial deposits and striations found in regions now located near the equator, such as Africa, South America, and India. These remnants indicate that these continents were once situated closer to the poles, where glacial activity could occur. Additionally, the alignment of rock layers and the presence of similar glacial features across continents support the idea of these landmasses being part of a single supercontinent. This evidence aligns with the theory of continental drift, which suggests that Pangaea existed around 335 million years ago.
Yes, there are glaciers in Australia, but they are limited in number and size. The most well-known glacier in Australia is the Heard Island Glacier, located on Heard Island in the southern Indian Ocean. The glaciers in Australia are largely found in the Australian Antarctic Territory.
glaciers are big and vary cold.
Yes, Mount Kilimanjaro does have snow and ice on its summit despite being close to the equator. However, the glaciers on the mountain have been shrinking in recent years due to climate change.
No, India was was not part of Asia at that time, it was still moving north-east across what was to become the Indian Ocean. In fact it was still south of the equator.
it formed glaciers it formed glaciers