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Has the continents always looked as they do now on the map, or have they changed shape or location throughout Earth's history? Write your ideas on a sheet of paper.

Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

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Has the continents always looked as they do now on the map, or have they changed shape or location throughout Earth's history? Write your ideas on a sheet of paper. Alfred Wegener: Pangaea. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

• Has the continents always looked as they do now on the map, or have they changed shape or location throughout Earth's history?

• Write your ideas on a sheet of paper.

Page 2: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Alfred Wegener: Pangaea• In early 1915, the German

scientist Alfred Wegener developed a theory that the continents once formed a giant supercontinent that he called Pangaea.

• Pangaea means all lands.• Wegener proposed the

theory of “Continental Drift:” that all the continents had once been joined together in a single landmass and have drifted apart over time.

Page 3: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Evidence for Continental Drift

• Wegener based the idea on 4 different types of evidence:

1. The continents fit together like a puzzle2. Fossil evidence3. Rock type and Structural Similarities4. Paleoclimaitc Evidence

Page 4: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Plate Tectonics

• Even with the pervious stated evidence, Wegener’s idea of continental drift was not accepted, because no one could come up with a reasonable mechanism for the movement of the continents, until about the 1960’s when the development of the theory of plate tectonics.

Page 5: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Plate Tectonics• Plate tectonics – is a theory that

explains how Earth’s exterior is broken into large slabs of lithosphere (plates) that are in continual motion with each other. This movement is due to convection currents.

• A convection current is a cycle created as hot matter rises, cools, and sinks. (Is a cycle created as hot matter rises & cold matter sinks.)

• Where else are there convection currents, or where else do we used convection currents?

Page 6: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Plate Tectonics• Plate tectonics – is a theory that explains

how Earth’s exterior is broken into large slabs of lithosphere (plates) that are in continual motion with each other. This movement is due to convection currents.

• A convection current is a cycle created as hot matter rises, cools, and sinks. (Is a cycle created as hot matter rises & cold matter sinks.)

• Where else are there convection currents, or where else do we used convection currents?– Cloud formation, the water cycle, cooking,

chemistry.• A plate is a large piece of lithosphere that is

able to move about the surface of the earth. Plates move about an inch a year on average. As plates move, they interact with each other.

• What are some of the causes of these interactions?

Page 7: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Plate Tectonics• Plate tectonics – is a theory that explains

how Earth’s exterior is broken into large slabs of lithosphere (plates) that are in continual motion with each other. This movement is due to convection currents.

• A convection current is a cycle created as hot matter rises, cools, and sinks. (Is a cycle created as hot matter rises & cold matter sinks.)

• Where else are there convection currents, or where else do we used convection currents?– Cloud formation, the water cycle, cooking,

chemistry.

• A plate is a large piece of lithosphere that is able to move about the surface of the earth. Plates move about an inch a year on average. As plates move, they interact with each other.

• What are some of the causes of these interactions?– Mountain building, earthquakes, rift valleys,

volcanos, trenches.

Page 8: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Like a Puzzle

• The continents’ fitting so well together is the first suggestion of continental drift.

• Take a look at the maps, and can you see where some of the other continents can fit together?

Page 9: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea
Page 10: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Fossil Evidence• Fossil - The remains of an

animal or plant preserved from an earlier era inside a rock or geological deposit, often as an impression or in a petrified state.

• Identical fossils were found on widely separated continents: such as Mesosaurus, Cynognathus, Lystrosaurus, and Glossopteris.

Lystrosaurus

Page 11: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Break into Groups

• Share your information with your groups.

• Draw or label this information on the map.

• Where are Mesosaurus, Cynognathus, Lystrosaurus, and Glossopteris found?

Page 12: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea
Page 13: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Rock Type and Structural Similarities

• There are similar rock types on continents on opposite sides of the Atlantic Ocean.

• Also, mountain ranges like the Appalachian Mtns. and mountains in Scotland and Scandinavia (Caledonia Mtns.) are similar in age, structure, and rock types.

• Don’t forget to label these mountains on your map.

Page 14: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Rock Type and Structural Similarities• When the continents are reassembled, the mountain

chains form a continuous belt.

Page 15: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Paleoclimatic Evidence• Glacial till of the same age is found

in southern Africa, South America, India, and Australia – areas that would be very difficult to explain the occurrence of glaciation.

• Also large coal deposits were formed from tropical swamps in N. America and Europe.

• Pangaea with S. Africa centered over the South Pole could account for the conditions necessary to generate glacial ice in the southern continents.

• Where would N. America and Europe be if the coal deposits were formed from tropical swamps?

Page 16: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Paleoclimatic Evidence• Glacial till of the same age is found in

southern Africa, South America, India, and Australia – areas that would be very difficult to explain the occurrence of glaciation.

• Also large coal deposits were formed from tropical swamps in N. America and Europe.

• Pangaea with S. Africa centered over the South Pole could account for the conditions necessary to generate glacial ice in the southern continents.

• Where would N. America and Europe be if the coal deposits were formed from tropical swamps?

• The areas with extensive coal deposits from the same time period occur in regions that would have been equatorial.

Page 17: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

One last look at how the continents' drifted.

Page 18: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Questions

• What theory did Alfred Wegener propose?• Continental drift.

Page 19: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Questions

• What is the theory of Continental Drift?• that all the continents had once been joined

together in a single landmass and have drifted apart over time.

Page 20: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Questions

• What are 2 types of evidence for continental drift?

1. The continents fit together like a puzzle.2. Fossil evidence.3. Rock type and Structural Similarities4. Paleoclimaitc Evidence.

Page 21: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Questions

• Why wasn’t Wegener’s idea of continental drift accepted?

• because no one could come up with a reasonable mechanism for the movement of the continents, until about the 1960’s when the development of the theory of plate tectonics.

Page 22: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Questions

• What are some of the causes of plate interactions?– Mountain building, earthquakes, rift valleys,

volcanos, trenches.

Page 23: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Questions

• Are mountains still building/growing?

Page 24: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Questions

• Describe a convection current.

Page 25: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Question/Homework

• Predict what you think the continents of the earth will look like in the future?

Page 26: Alfred Wegener: Pangaea

Question/Homework

• How has continental drift effected how species evolve over time?