Rocks being pushed together is called compression. This can result in the rocks being folded, faulted, or metamorphosed depending on the amount of force applied.
When the continents were together in a single landmass, they were known as Pangaea. This supercontinent existed around 300 million years ago and eventually broke apart to form the continents we have today.
Evidence supporting the theory of the supercontinent Pangaea includes the jigsaw-like fit of continents, similarities in rock formations and mountain ranges across continents that align when continents are brought together, distribution of fossils of identical species across distant continents, and similarities in ancient climates and geological records found on separate continents. These pieces of evidence work together to suggest that the current continents were once part of a single landmass.
Alfred Wegener found evidence for his theory of continental drift through similarities in geological formations, fossils, and ancient climate patterns on different continents. He observed that the continents appeared to fit together like pieces of a puzzle, providing support for the idea that they were once connected.
The edges of Earth's continents fit together like a jigsaw puzzle due to the theory of plate tectonics. This theory suggests that the Earth's crust is divided into large plates that move and interact with each other over time. Over millions of years, the continents have shifted and drifted apart, causing their edges to fit together.
The two continents of Africa and Eurasia pushed together and folded the rocks into mountains.
When all the continents are stuck together, it is called a supercontinent. The most recent supercontinent is known as Pangaea.
Their two big continents smushed together, why not just call it one.
Their two big continents smushed together, why not just call it one.
The continents that were proposed to have once fit together are called Pangaea. This supercontinent existed around 300 million years ago before breaking apart into the continents we know today.
Their two big continents smushed together, why not just call it one.
When the continents were together it was called "pangea"
because Missouri had extended and it had pushed everything together . After everything was pushed together it formed.
pushed out of shape
because the continents keep moving every day, that is how the continents got the way they are right now.and they will keep on moving a continental drift is when the continents were all joined together and they use to call it panagaea. one day the continents started to spleet up into two continents and they were call gondwana and laurasia. after a few years they started to separate into groups. so a continental drift is when continents are moving. for example every year it Australia move 5 cm.
Oceans and continents formed through the process of plate tectonics. Over millions of years, the Earth's crust has been broken into large plates that are continuously moving. When these plates move apart, they create gaps that are filled with water, forming oceans. Continents are created when plates collide and are pushed together, causing landmasses to rise up.
North America and Europe were once joined together as part of the supercontinent Pangaea. Over millions of years, these landmasses drifted apart due to plate tectonics, forming the Atlantic Ocean between them.