You'll Never Be Able To Travel To Any Of These 14 Continents
by N/A, 10 years ago |
1 min read
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These former continents helped form the world we know today.
1. Euramerica

Euramerica was actually just the union of Baltica and Laurentia and was called "The Old Red Sandstone Continent."
2. Pangaea

Pangaea formed 300 million years BCE and when it broke apart it formed the Earth as we know it today.
3. Baltica

Baltica is now a part of Northern Europe but once contained parts of Scandinavia, Poland and Northern Germany.
4. South China

South China existed on it's own floating out in the ocean and combined with North China between 215 and 176 million years ago.
5. Rodinia

Rodinia was a supercontinent whose name means homeland. It contain almost every landmass on Earth.
6. Gondwana

Pangaea essentially consisted of Laurasia and Gondwana. Gondwana contained parts of modern-day Madagascar, India, Antarctica, Australia, and Africa.
7. Pannotia

Pannotia temporary brought Baltica, Laurentia, and Gondwana after Rodinia broke apart.
8. Columbia

Columbia was given it's name by geologist John J.W. Rogers because it existed in the Columbia river region. It formed 1.8 billion years ago.
9. Laurentia

Laurentia was once a part of Kenorland and contained parts of Greenland, Scotland and North America. It also help form many other continents found here.
10. Asiamerica

11. Kenorland

Kenorland stayed intact for about 300 million years ago and split about 2.4 billions years ago. It contained most of the U.S., Canada, Western Australia and Greenland.
12. Laurasia

When Laurasia broke apart, it helped form large parts of Eurasia and North America.
13. Ur

Ur is said to be the world's first continent. It formed 3 billion years BCE and fell apart when Pangaea split apart. Today it's split between India, Madagascar and Australia.
14. Atlantica

Atlantica is now widely dispersed throughout the world. It is also one of the world's earliest continents.
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