Relevance to tectonic theory
- Also spelled:
- Pangaea
- Key People:
- Alfred Wegener
Pangea’s formal conceptualization began with Wegener’s work in 1910. Like other scientists before him, Wegener became impressed with the similarity in the coastlines of eastern South America and western Africa and speculated that those lands had once been joined together. He began to toy with the idea that in the late Paleozoic Era (which ended about 252 million years ago) all the present-day continents had formed a single large mass, or supercontinent, which subsequently broke apart. Wegener called this ancient continent Pangaea.
Other scientists had proposed that such a continent existed but had explained the separation of the modern world’s continents as resulting from the subsidence, or sinking, of large portions of the supercontinent to form the Atlantic and Indian oceans. Wegener, by contrast, proposed that Pangaea’s constituent portions had slowly moved thousands of miles apart over long periods of geologic time. Wegener proposed his term for this movement, die Verschiebung der Kontinente (German: “continental displacement”), which gave rise to the term continental drift, in 1912. In 1937 Alexander L. Du Toit, a South African geologist, modified Wegener’s hypothesis by suggesting two primordial continents: Laurasia in the north and Gondwana in the south. Although Wegener did not manage to persuade the scientific world of continental drift, Du Toit’s work continued to amass evidence of it. However, the mechanism driving continental drift remained elusive until a successor theory, plate tectonics, was worked out during the 1960s.
Other supercontinents
During Earth’s long history, there probably have been several Pangea-like supercontinents. The oldest of those supercontinents is called Rodinia and was formed during Precambrian time some one billion years ago. Another Pangea-like supercontinent, Pannotia, was assembled 600 million years ago, at the end of the Precambrian. Present-day plate motions are bringing the continents together once again. Africa has begun to collide with southern Europe, and the Australian Plate is now colliding with Southeast Asia. Within the next 250 million years, Africa and the Americas will merge with Eurasia to form a supercontinent that approaches Pangean proportions. The episodic assembly of the world’s landmasses has been called the supercontinent cycle or, in honour of Wegener, the Wegenerian cycle (see plate tectonics: Supercontinent cycle).