Geography, asked by arleneachieng, 10 months ago

explain the evidence that support the continental drift theory

Answers

Answered by HarsitaSaikia
20

Answer:

theory of continental drift

german scientist Alfred wegener formed this idea of continental drift. he argued that continents once formed as a single landmass, which he named Pangaea (Greek 'for all land') .it broke into pieces due to the weakness in the earth's crust as they were made up of less dense materials, which drifted centimetre by centimetre over millions of years until they arrived at where they are now.

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Answered by krishna210398
0

Answer:

The continental drift hypothesis was largely developed by Alfred Wegener in the early twentieth century. According to Wegener, continents move around on Earth's surface and were previously linked as a single supercontinent. Scientists did not believe the continents could shift when Wegener was alive.

Explanation:

Wegener and his allies gathered a lot of evidence for the continental drift idea, other from the way the continents fit together.

.On both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, identical rocks of the same type and age can be found. According to Wegener, the rocks formed side by side and the earth has since shifted apart.

.Mountain ranges with similar rock kinds, structures, and ages now straddle both sides of the Atlantic Ocean. Mountain ranges in eastern Greenland, Ireland, the United Kingdom, and Norway, for example, are similar to the Appalachians in the eastern United States and Canada (figure 2). Wegener came to the conclusion that they originated as an one mountain range that was split apart as the continents moved apart.

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