Alfred Wegener's evidence for continental drift came in the form of similarities in the ancient climates of continents that are now widely separated. Geological evidence, such as matching rock formations and fossil distributions, supported his theory that continents were once connected in a single landmass. Wegener proposed that these continents drifted apart over time, leading to the climate variations observed today.
His eviendence (and since he didn't have enough) was that he found eviendence on fossils land scape trenches and when he put the continents all together than he saw that the continents fit like a jigsaw puzzle and called it pangea.
Alfred Wegener used fossil evidence (matching plant and animal species across continents), geological evidence (similar rock formations and mountain ranges on different continents), climate evidence (glacial deposits and ancient climate patterns that suggested continents were once connected), and fit of continents (the way the continents seem to fit together like a puzzle) to support his hypothesis of continental drift.
No, Alfred Wegener provided evidence from continental drift and fossil distribution to support his theory of plate tectonics, not a shrinking Earth. Wegener's theory suggested that the continents were once connected in a single landmass (Pangaea) and drifted apart over time due to the movement of tectonic plates.
Rock clues support Wegners theory of continental drift and Pangaea because when India hit Eurasia the Himalayas formed and that is where Mt Everest is today! Climate clues include glacial evidence in tropical places it shows glacial evidence that there was once glaciers there. Fossil clues in clue many tropical plants and animal fossils were found in places like Antarctica where these plants and animals could not grow. Also dinosaur bones were found scattered around there earth. Dinosaurs can't swim, so they must have walked around this way!
True. Alfred Wegener proposed the theory of continental drift, suggesting that continents were once joined together and have since drifted apart. He used the distribution of fossils, like tropical plants in polar regions, as evidence to support his theory.
He's middle name is Alfred Lothar Wegner.
Alfred Wegner's hypothesis about Pangea was that it is one whole big continent.
Alfred Wegner never married so he never had any daughters or children. His siblings might have had children though.
you pronounce it like ale_fred _veg_ner I hope this helps you ;D bye
He discovered Pangaea; once all the continents were together, as one big continent.
Alfred Wegener's evidence for his theory of continental drift included similarities in the shapes of the coastlines of continents, the distribution of fossils across continents, and the matching geological features on different continents. These provided support for the idea that the continents were once connected and have moved over time, influencing climate patterns.
He used evidence from landform, climate, and fossils to support his theory of the continental drift.
No, Alfred Wegener proposed the theory of continental drift, not a shrinking earth. He used evidence from matching coastlines, fossils, rock types, and climate to support his idea that the continents were once joined in a single supercontinent called Pangaea.
Alfred Wegener used fossil evidence, geological evidence, and paleoclimatic evidence to support his theory of Continental Drift. Fossils of the same species found on different continents, similar rock formations and mountain ranges across continents, and matching ancient climate patterns were key pieces of evidence that he presented.
His eviendence (and since he didn't have enough) was that he found eviendence on fossils land scape trenches and when he put the continents all together than he saw that the continents fit like a jigsaw puzzle and called it pangea.
Alfred Wegener used fossil evidence (matching plant and animal species across continents), geological evidence (similar rock formations and mountain ranges on different continents), climate evidence (glacial deposits and ancient climate patterns that suggested continents were once connected), and fit of continents (the way the continents seem to fit together like a puzzle) to support his hypothesis of continental drift.
Wegener's evidence for Pangaea included the fit of the continents like a jigsaw puzzle, similar rock formations and fossils on different continents, and matching mountain ranges across continents. Additionally, the distribution of climate-sensitive organisms and glacial deposits provided further support for the theory of continental drift.