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The world would look a lot different if the supercontinent Pangaea spontaneously reunited.* Take a look at the map below, from a blog called My Laboratory of Ideas . Click to enlarge.
Pangea wasn’t the first, and it won’t be the last. Take a look ahead at the shape of the world to come. Pangea wasn’t the first, ... From our human viewpoint, the current world map seems a fait ...
08-14-2013 MAPS. Pangea Redrawn With Today’s Political Boundaries. Once, the earth was comprised of a supercontinent called Pangea.
Pretty wild, right? It's a map of Pangea — a supercontinent that formed roughly 300 million years ago — mapped with contemporary geopolitical borders.
The dynamics of these shifting plates split the last supercontinent, Pangea, and its remnants formed the world map as we know it. But every 400-600 million years, Earth’s landmasses crash back ...
The formation of a new “supercontinent” could wipe out humans and all other mammals still alive in 250 million years, researchers have predicted. Using the first-ever supercomputer climate ...
But by the time Pangea Ultima forms, CO2 levels could double naturally to as high as 1,120 parts per million (today, CO2 levels are around 418 parts per million).