Wegner's theory was not accept because he didn't have much evidence to support his theory with and scientists thought that there might have been a land bridge between the continents. Another reason to why his theory was rejected was that he was a foreigner, by that; the scientists didn't really take him seriously.
by the product!
Hypothesis.
Does this evidence relate to what I am saying
hypothesis is a reasonable explanation for a natural phenomenon or an observation
yes
He used evidence from landform, climate, and fossils to support his theory of the continental drift.
In Africa there are scratch marks that could only have been caused by glaciers but Africa is by a hot place by the equate so once it was colder there
Fossil evidence showing similar plant and animal species in regions that are now widely separated provides support for Wegner's hypothesis of continental drift. This suggests that the continents were once connected in a single landmass.
Two main pieces of evidence that support Wegner's theory of continental drift are the fit of the continents' coastlines, indicating they were once connected, and the distribution of similar fossils and rock formations across separate continents, suggesting a shared geological history.
Four pieces of evidence used by Alfred Wegener to support his theory of continental drift were the fit of the continents, matching geological formations across continents, similar fossil distributions, and glacial evidence in tropical regions.
In Africa there are scratch marks that could only have been caused by glaciers but Africa is by a hot place by the equate so once it was colder there
Alfred Wegener used evidence from the fit of continents, distribution of fossils, rock types, and ancient climate data to support his theory of continental drift.
Wegner used evidence from fossil distributions, rock formations, and the fit of continents like puzzle pieces to support his theory of continental drift. He also noted similarities in plant and animal species found on different continents, suggesting they were once connected.
Wegner needed evidence of a mechanism by which continents could move, data supporting the idea of past and present continental positions, geological similarities between continents, and paleoclimatic evidence to strengthen his argument for continental drift.
he found fossles
Wegner developed this theory not only because many continents appear to fit together like a jigsaw, but also because he had fossil and climate evidence to support the fact that the continents once fit together.