Pangaea
Yes. They think the earth's crust (where we are right now), is broken into huge plates (the continents) that fit together, but move very slowly. Thank you for asking.
When large land masses move slowly over long periods of time, it is referred to as continental drift. This movement is driven by the gradual shifting of tectonic plates beneath the Earth's surface, leading to the changing positions and configurations of continents over millions of years.
The continents are part of Earth's tectonic plate system, when the plates move the continents move with them. The plate movement is driven by slow mantle convection driven by the heat in Earth's core.
Continents drift on top of the upper mantle. The core is much further down.
The idea that continents move slowly across the earth's surface is called the continental drift.
No, not currently. The continents won't change for hundreds of millions of years as they move extremely slowly.
The idea that continents move slowly across Earth's surface is called plate tectonics. This theory explains how the Earth's lithosphere is divided into plates that move and interact with each other, leading to processes such as earthquakes, volcanic activity, and the formation of mountain ranges.
The theory of plate tectonics.
continental drift
magma is very hot so as it boils it moves the plates of the earth causing the continents to slowly move apart
Pangaea
Continental drift is the theory that Earth's continents move slowly over time due to the movement of tectonic plates.
Scientists were convinced that continents were slowly moving due to evidence such as fit of the continents' coastlines, matching geological features across continents, and the discovery of mid-ocean ridges and seafloor spreading. This evidence supported the theory of plate tectonics, which explains how continents move over time.
yes, they do move, but very slowly, too slow for the naked eye can see. billions of years ago, all of the continents were squished together, but they gradually spread apart. I'm a fifth grader.
The process in which continents slowly move is called plate tectonics. This movement is caused by the interactions of large sections of the Earth's lithosphere known as tectonic plates. Over time, these plates drift and collide, leading to the formation of mountains, volcanoes, and earthquakes.
The hypothesis that continents move slowly is called the theory of plate tectonics. This theory proposes that the Earth's outer shell is divided into several plates that move and interact with each other over geological time scales.