Africa and South America are moving apart due to the process of plate tectonics. The movement is caused by the shifting of tectonic plates beneath the Earth's surface, which results in the continents drifting away from each other over time.
its a movement of land called "continental drift" where land slowly moves apart
Yes back in the Permian Period Africa and South America were connected. The Continental Drift broke them apart. There is proof not only in geographic maps but also in fossils such as the Mesoaurus.
South America fits alongside Africa. If you look at a map and see the west coast of Africa and the east coast of South America, you can see they are like jigsaw pieces to each other, as at one time they were together, before splitting and drifting apart.
Compare a map of South America against Africa. The two fit, so have drifted apart
If you look at a map of the world you can see that South America and Africa used to be joined. People have discovered that the east coast of South America and the west coast of Africa have the same rock type. Also there was animals that lived in South America and in Africa, people were wondering how they could of got to Africa from America without flying or swimming, they must of been able to walk across from the two countries. The Continental Drift from the plates drifted the two countries apart and that causes the world to be as it is now. When the world first begun, all the countries were joint together so you could of walked from Scotland to France, but the Continental Drift drifted all the countries apart.
It was because of fossils that scientist found.
The 7 major continents are North America, South America, Africa, Australia, Europe, Asia, and Antarctica. They all used to be part of Pangaea before they broke apart.
The South Atlantic has South America and Southern Africa with adjacent coasts. All of South America was colonized by Spain apart from Brazil which was colonized by Portugal. Southern Africa was colonized by various European powers including Britain, Portugal, Germany, France and Spain.
During the time of Pangaea, North America was attached to the continents of Europe, Africa, and South America. These landmasses were all part of the supercontinent Pangaea before they eventually drifted apart to form the continents we recognize today.
yes. because of the sea-floor spreading making Africa and South America drift apart even more
North America