Pangaea,
Pangæa, or
Pangea ( , from
Ancient
Greek πᾶν
pan "entire", and Γαῖα
Gaia
"Earth", Latinized as
Gæa) was the
supercontinent that existed during the
Paleozoic and
Mesozoic eras about 250 million years ago, before
the component
continents were separated
into their current configuration.
The name was first used by
Alfred
Wegener, the
German originator of
the
continental drift theory, in
the 1920 edition of his book
The Origin of Continents and
Oceans (Die Entstehung der Kontinente und Ozeane). He
postulated that all the continents had at one time formed a single
supercontinent, Pangaea, before later
breaking up and drifting to their present locations.
The single
enormous ocean which
surrounded Pangaea is known as
Panthalassa.
Formation
The breaking up and formation of supercontinents appears to be
cyclical through Earth's 4.6
billion year history. There may have been
several others before Pangaea. The
next-to-last one,
Pannotia, formed about
600 million years ago (Ma) during the
Proterozoic eon, and lasted until 540 Ma.
Before Pannotia, there was
Rodinia, which
lasted from about 1.1 billion years ago (Ga) until about 750
million years ago. The exact configuration and geodynamic history
of Rodinia are not nearly as well understood as for Pannotia and
Pangaea.
When Rodinia broke up, it split into three pieces, the
supercontinent of
Proto-Laurasia and
the supercontinent of
Proto-Gondwana,
and the smaller
Congo craton.
Proto-Laurasia and Proto-Gondwana were separated by the
Proto-Tethys Ocean. Soon thereafter
Proto-Laurasia itself split apart to
form the continents of
Laurentia,
Siberia and
Baltica.
The rifting also spawned two new oceans, the
Iapetus Ocean and Indian Ocean
. Baltica was situated east of Laurentia, and
Siberia northeast of Laurentia.
Around 600 Ma, most of these masses came back together to form
the relatively short-lived supercontinent of
Pannotia, which included large amounts of land near
the poles and only a relatively small strip near the equator
connecting the polar masses.
Only 60 million years after its formation, about 540 Ma, near
the beginning of the
Cambrian epoch,
Pannotia in turn broke up, giving rise to the continents of
Laurentia,
Baltica,
and the southern supercontinent of
Gondwana.
In the
Cambrian period the independent
continent of
Laurentia, which would become
North America, sat on the
equator, with three bordering oceans: the
Panthalassic Ocean to the north and west,
the
Iapetus Ocean to the south and the
Khanty Ocean to the east.
In the Earliest
Ordovician, around 480 Ma, the
microcontinent of Avalonia, a landmass that
would become the northeastern United States
, Nova
Scotia
and England
, broke free
from Gondwana and began its journey to Laurentia.

Euramerica's formation

Appalachian orogeny
Baltica, Laurentia, and Avalonia all came together by the end of
the Ordovician to form a minor supercontinent called
Euramerica or Laurussia, closing the Iapetus
Ocean.
The
collision also resulted in the formation of the northern Appalachians
. Siberia
sat near Euramerica, with the
Khanty
Ocean between the two continents. While all this was happening,
Gondwana drifted slowly towards the South Pole. This was the first
step of the formation of Pangaea.
The second step in the formation of Pangaea was the collision of
Gondwana with
Euramerica. By
Silurian time, 440 Ma, Baltica had already
collided with Laurentia to form Euramerica.
Avalonia had not collided with
Laurentia yet, and a seaway between them, a
remnant of the
Iapetus Ocean, was
still shrinking as Avalonia slowly inched towards Laurentia.
Meanwhile,
southern Europe
fragmented from Gondwana and started to head towards Euramerica
across the newly formed
Rheic Ocean and
collided with southern
Baltica in the
Devonian, though this microcontinent was an
underwater plate. The Iapetus Ocean's sister ocean, the Khanty
Ocean, was also shrinking as an island arc from Siberia collided
with eastern Baltica (now part of Euramerica). Behind this
island arc was a new ocean, the
Ural Ocean.
By late Silurian time,
North
and
South China rifted away
from Gondwana and started to head northward across the shrinking
Proto-Tethys Ocean, and on its southern end the new
Paleo-Tethys Ocean was opening. In the
Devonian Period, Gondwana itself headed towards Euramerica, which
caused the Rheic Ocean to shrink.
In the
Early Carboniferous, northwest
Africa had touched the southeastern coast of
Euramerica, creating the southern portion
of the Appalachian
Mountains
, and the Meseta
Mountains. South America
moved northward to southern Euramerica, while the eastern portion
of Gondwana (India
, Antarctica
and Australia) headed
towards the South Pole from the equator.
North China and South China were on independent continents. The
Kazakhstania microcontinent had
collided with
Siberia (Siberia
had been a separate continent for millions of years since the
deformation of the supercontinent
Pannotia)
in the Middle Carboniferous.
Western
Kazakhstania collided with Baltica in the Late Carboniferous, closing the
Ural Ocean between them, and the western
Proto-Tethys in them (Uralian
orogeny), causing the formation of the Ural Mountains
, and the formation of the supercontinent of
Laurasia. This was the last step of the formation of
Pangaea.
Meanwhile,
South America had collided with southern Laurentia, closing the Rheic Ocean, and forming the southernmost part
of the Appalachians
and Ouachita Mountains
. By this time, Gondwana was positioned near
the South Pole, and glaciers were forming in Antarctica, India,
Australia, southern Africa and South America.
The North China block collided with Siberia
by Late
Carboniferous time, completely closing the Proto-Tethys
Ocean.
By Early
Permian time, the
Cimmerian plate rifted away from Gondwana
and headed towards Laurasia, with a new ocean forming in its
southern end, the
Tethys Ocean, and the
closure of the
Paleo-Tethys
Ocean. Most of the landmasses were all in one. By the
Triassic Period, Pangaea rotated a little, in a
southwest direction. The Cimmerian plate was still travelling
across the shrinking Paleo-Tethys, until the
Middle Jurassic time. The Paleo-Tethys had
closed from west to east, creating the
Cimmerian Orogeny. Pangaea looked like a
C, with an ocean inside the
C, the new Tethys
Ocean. Pangaea had rifted by the Middle Jurassic, and its
deformation is explained below.
==
Evidence of existence
Fossil evidence for Pangaea includes the
presence of similar and identical species on continents that are
now great distances apart.
For example, fossils of the therapsid Lystrosaurus have been found in South Africa, India
and Australia, alongside members of the Glossopteris flora, whose distribution
would have ranged from the polar circle to the equator if the
continents had been in their present position; similarly, the
freshwater reptile Mesosaurus
has only been found in localized regions of the coasts of Brazil
and West Africa.
Additional evidence for Pangaea is found in the
geology of adjacent continents, including matching
geological trends between the eastern coast of
South America and the western coast of
Africa.
The
polar ice cap of the
Carboniferous Period covered the southern end
of Pangaea. Glacial deposits, specifically
till, of the same age and structure are found on many
separate continents which would have been together in the continent
of Pangaea.
Apparent polar wandering paths also support the theory of a
super-continent. Geologists can determine the movement of
continental plates by examining the orientation of magnetic
minerals in rocks; when rocks are formed, they take on the magnetic
properties of the Earth and indicate in which direction the poles
lie relative to the rock. Because we know that the poles do not
move more than a few degrees, magnetic anomalies in rocks can only
be explained by the drifting of continents.
The continuity of mountain chains also provide evidence for Pangea.
One
example of this is the Appalachian Mountains
chain which extends from the northeastern United States
to the Caledonides of
Ireland, Britain, Greenland, and Scandinavia..
Rifting and break-up

Pangaea separation animation
There were three major phases in the break-up of Pangaea.
The first
phase began in the Early-Middle Jurassic (about 175 Ma), when Pangaea
began to rift from the Tethys Ocean in the east and the Pacific
in the west, ultimately giving rise to the
supercontinents Laurasia and Gondwana. The rifting that took
place between North America and Africa produced multiple
failed rifts.
One rift resulted in
a new ocean, the North Atlantic Ocean
.
The Atlantic Ocean did not open uniformly; rifting began in the
north-central Atlantic.
The South Atlantic
did not open until the Cretaceous. Laurasia started to rotate
clockwise and moved northward with North America to the north, and
Eurasia to the south. The clockwise motion
of Laurasia also led to the closing of the Tethys Ocean.
Meanwhile, on the other side of Africa, new
rifts were also forming along the adjacent margins of east Africa,
Antarctica and Madagascar
that would lead to the formation of the
southwestern Indian
Ocean
that would also open up in the
Cretaceous.
The second major phase in the break-up of Pangaea began in the
Early Cretaceous (150–140 Ma),
when the minor supercontinent of Gondwana separated into four
multiple continents (Africa, South America, India and
Antarctica/Australia). About 200 Ma, the continent of
Cimmeria, as mentioned above (see "
Formation of Pangaea"),
collided with Eurasia. However, a subduction zone was forming, as
soon as Cimmeria collided.
This subduction zone was called the
Tethyan Trench. This trench might have
subducted what is called the Tethyan
mid-ocean ridge, a ridge responsible for the
Tethys Ocean's expansion. It probably caused Africa, India and
Australia to move northward. In the Early Cretaceous,
Atlantica, today's South America and Africa,
finally separated from eastern Gondwana (Antarctica, India and
Australia), causing the opening of a "South Indian Ocean". In the
Middle Cretaceous, Gondwana fragmented to open up the South
Atlantic Ocean as South America started to move westward away from
Africa. The South Atlantic did not develop uniformly; rather, it
rifted from south to north.
Also, at
the same time, Madagascar
and India began to separate from Antarctica and
moved northward, opening up the Indian Ocean. Madagascar and
India separated from each other 100–90 Ma in the Late
Cretaceous. India continued to move northward toward Eurasia at 15
centimeters (6 in) per year (a plate tectonic record), closing
the Tethys Ocean, while Madagascar stopped and became locked to the
African Plate.
New Zealand
, New
Caledonia
and the rest
of Zealandia began to separate
from Australia, moving eastward towards the Pacific
and opening the Coral Sea
and Tasman
Sea
.
The third major and final phase of the break-up of Pangaea occurred
in the early
Cenozoic (
Paleocene to
Oligocene).
Laurasia split when North America/Greenland (also
called Laurentia) broke free from Eurasia,
opening the Norwegian
Sea
about 60–55 Ma. The Atlantic and Indian
Oceans continued to expand, closing the Tethys Ocean.
Meanwhile, Australia split from Antarctica and moved rapidly
northward, just as India did more than 40 million years earlier,
and is currently on a collision course with
eastern Asia. Both Australia and India are
currently moving in a northeastern direction at
5–6 centimeters (2–3 in) per year. Antarctica has been
near or at the South Pole since the formation of Pangaea about
280 Ma. India started to collide with
Asia
beginning about 35 Ma, forming the
Himalayan orogeny, and also finally
closing the
Tethys Seaway; this
collision continues today. The African Plate started to change
directions, from west to northwest toward
Europe, and South America began to move in a
northward direction, separating it from Antarctica and allowing
complete oceanic circulation around Antarctica for the first time,
causing a rapid cooling of the continent and allowing
glaciers to form.
Other major events took place during the
Cenozoic, including the opening of the
Gulf of
California
, the uplift of the Alps, and
the opening of the Sea of
Japan
. The break-up of Pangaea continues today in
the
Great Rift Valley.
See also
References
- OED
- Plate Tectonics and Crustal Evolution, Third Ed., 1989, by Kent
C. Condie, Pergamon Press
- Benton, M.J. Vertebrate Palaeontology. Third edition
(Oxford 2005), 25.
- Barbara W. Murck, Brian J. Skinner, Geology Today:
Understanding Our Planet, Study Guide, Wiley, ISBN
978-0-471-32323-5
- Zeeya Merali, Brian J. Skinner, Visualizing Earth
Science, Wiley, ISBN 978-0470-41847-5
External links