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The Earth - Do The Continents Move?

Do the continents move?

Yes, the continents do move very slowly over time. The theory of continental drift was developed in 1912 by German geologist (a scientist who studies the origin, history, and structure of the Earth) Alfred Lothar Wegener (1880-1930). Wegener proposed that between 200 and 250 million years ago all land on Earth was joined together in one huge continent. The continent, called Pangaea (from the Greek word meaning "all-Earth"), was situated near present-day Antarctica. Wegener believed that forces deep within the Earth caused the land to break apart, first into two major continents called Laurasia and Gondwanaland, and eventually into the six continents in their current configuration.

While Wegener's theory was initially discounted, subsequent research showed that the continents do move—an estimated 0.75 inches (19 millimeters) annually. However, they do not "drift," as Wegener proposed, but move...

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