CONTINENTAL DRIFT


The face of the Earth is always changing and throughout geologic history oceans have been created and destroyed. Modern geologic evidence indicates that the ocean bottom is moving at a rate from about one-half to six inches a year through a process called plate tectonics.

CONTINENTAL DRIFT
Pangaea broke up with part of the continent drifting north and part south. 1) The northern part split to form the North Atlantic Ocean 208-146 million years ago (mya). 2) The South Atlantic and Indian oceans began to form 146-65 mya. 3) The continents continue to drift. Today the oceans are still changing shape; the Atlantic Ocean gets wider by a few inches each year.
Roughly 200 million years ago the Earth's surface was very different from the familiar pattern of land we know today. All of the land masses were grouped together into one vast supercontinent called Pangaea. The rest of the globe was covered by a single great ocean known as Panthalassa.
Slowly, over millions of years, the great land mass split apart. The pieces began to move over the Earth's surface driven by slowly churning currents in the molten rocks beneath the Earth's hard outer layers. The gigantic plates on the Earth's crust move like a conveyor belt. As new areas of ocean floor form at mid-ocean ridges, old areas are dragged down, or subducted, into the Earth's mantle, which explains why the older rocks cannot be found.
By about 35 million years ago the pattern of land and sea was very much like it is today. But the continents are still moving and as the Atlantic and Indian oceans continue to get wider by a few inches every year, the Pacific is slowly shrinking. At the northeast corner of Africa we can see the start of a new ocean. For the last 25 million years, the Red Sea has been widening. If it continues at the same rate, in 200 million years it will be as wide as the Atlantic is today.
If you look down at our planet from outer space, most of what you see is water; 71% of the planet's surface is covered by ocean and it is because of this that the Earth is sometimes called "the water planet". Only about three-tenths of our globe is covered with land.
The ocean wraps the globe and is divided into four major regions: the Atlantic Ocean, the Pacific Ocean, the Indian Ocean and the Arctic Ocean. Some scientists consider the waters around Antarctica to be a separate, fifth ocean as well. These oceans, although distinct in some ways, are all interconnected; the same water is circulated throughout them all.

If all the continents were crammed into one corner of the Earth, the vast extent of the world ocean could easily be seen. In reality, of course, the continents are not bunched together as shown in the figure to the right, but instead are spread out over the entire Earth's surface. Most oceanographers, however, believe that a long time ago in the Earth's geologic history all of the continents were once grouped closely together in much the same manner.

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