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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. It’s certain many of these ...
Pretty wild, right? It's a map of Pangea — a supercontinent that formed roughly 300 million years ago — mapped with contemporary geopolitical borders.
Once, the earth was comprised of a supercontinent called Pangea. So what would that continent look like if it had the political boundaries of today?
The Next Pangea: What Earth’s Future Supercontinent Will Look Like Pangea wasn’t the first, and it won’t be the last. Take a look ahead at the shape of the world to come.
Study: Pangea ‘supercontinent’ could wipe out humans Continents will rejoin in 250 million years, researchers predict Subscribers are entitled to 10 gift sharing articles each month.
After putting out the call for entries months ago, Pangea Day organizers were inundated with more than 2,500 film submissions from more than 100 countries. Later teaming with Nokia, the event expanded ...
A unique map can change the way you view the world. The Australian company Pangea Maps offers a particularly clever vantage point: topographic maps of regions of the ocean floor, laser-cut out of ...
Australian freelance illustrator Richard Morden has put together a whimsical and surprisingly accurate map of Pangaea, the massive supercontinent that dominated the Earth over 200 million years ...
If the geopolitical divisions of the modern world had existed when Stegosauruses roamed the earth, the world might have looked something like this map by Italian blogger Massimo Pietrobon ...
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