Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Is it significant that the majority of the Earth's landmasses are in northern hemisphere
A.� No, the earth's surface isn't a solid mass; it's made up of plates. These plates move, taking the continents with them. The official term for this is plate tectonics.
�
Consequently the size, shape and position of the continents are different today than in the past and what they will be in the present.
�
It's pure coincidence that the majority of the earth's landmasses are in northern hemisphere; just the way things are at the moment.
�
Q.� The moment
A.� Yes, at various times in the past, much of the Earth's land masses were clustered in the southern hemisphere in a super continent called Gondwanaland.
�
Q.� What's Gondwanaland
A.� The name given to super continent that existed during the Cambrian Period.
�
Q.� What was Gondwanaland comprised of
A.� This large continent comprised of Australia, Antarctica, and South America on Earth's eastern side. North America and Greenland formed a large island near the equator and Europe formed a small island south of equator. North America and Europe were separated by the Iapetus Ocean or present-day Atlantic Ocean.
�
Q.� Was Gondwanaland the biggest super continent ever
A.� No, that title probably goes to Pangaea, that existed from the Permian through Jurassic periods, around 200 million years ago, which split up to form Gondwanaland and Laurasia.
�
Pangaea, which is Greek for 'all earth', started to break up into two smaller super continents, called Laurasia and Gondwanaland, during the late Triassic.
�
Do you have a question about our earth Click here to ask.
�
by Lisa Cardy