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Evidence For Continental Drift
Evidence For Continental Drift
DIRECTIONS:
*Use different colored pencils to illustrate the four categories of evidence used by Alfred Wegener to
reconstruct the super continent of Pangaea. Cut out the continents, and arrange them on another
sheet of paper to represent the continent of Pangaea. Include a key and a title for your map.
Key to Wegener’s Puzzling Evidence – Fossils - Alfred Wegener's evidence for continental
drift is shown on the cut-outs you created. Wegener used this evidence to reconstruct the positions of
the continents relative to each other in the distant past. Fossils were a primary part of his
reconstruction. Use the background information on the fossils to help answer the conclusion
questions.
Fossil remains of the half meter-long fresh or brackish water (reptile) Mesosaurus.
Mesosaurs flourished in the early Mesozoic Era, about 240 million years ago. Mesosaurs
had limbs for swimming, but could also walk on land. Other fossil evidence found in
rocks along with Mesosaurs indicate that they lived in lakes and coastal bays or estuaries.
Fossil remains of Cynognathus, a land reptile approximately 3 meters long that lived
during the Early Mesozoic Era, about 230 million years ago. It was a weak swimmer.
2. The lines on the following map show Paleozoic Mountain belts on either side of
the Atlantic Ocean. Matching letters represent the matching mountain chains.
3. The shaded areas on this map represent areas where there is evidence of
glaciations during the Paleozoic era.
4. The various letters on this map represent evidence for the location of climate
zones during the Carboniferous Period. Scientist have been able to determine the
location of these zones after the study of rock, fossil and other evidence.
2. Scientists have evidence that Glossopteris was found in what is now India, Antarctica, Australia,
and Madagascar. What does this tell you about Glossopteris? What does it tell you about the climate
and environment of Pangaea?
3. Based on the geologic past, we can assume that Earth is always changing. What modern-day
evidence supports this idea? Hint: Think about natural disasters. Where do they often occur?
4. How do you think the theory of Continental drift helped in our understanding of plate tectonics?
5. Given enough time do you think the continents will come back together again?
This page was copied with permission from the University of California, Irvine
California Science Implementation Network - UCI/CSIN 1989
May be reproduced for non-profit educational uses only.
The evolution of a theory - plate tectonics
These events are in jumbled order. Cut them into strips and re-assemble to give the correct sequence.
Paste them in correct order on the back of your completed Pangaea Map.
1912 Alfred Wegener; His ideas were published in a book in English in 1924 called, ‘The Origin of
Continents and Oceans’. His idea was called ‘continental displacement’ which later became,
continental drift’. His book contained five major lines of evidence:
a) The jigsaw fit - the very close match between the coastlines of Africa and South America;
b) Matching of the geological patterns from either side of the south Atlantic (the pattern on the
jigsaw)
c) Fossil evidence (Mesosaurus - a reptile, Lystrosaurus - another reptile, Antarctic beech)
d) Paleoclimatic reasoning
e) He attempted to show the movement of continents by the change in their distance apart,
shown by timing radio transmissions over a number of years. Wegener died in 1930.
1967 Jason Morgan, Dan McKenzie and Xavier le Pichon; Developed all the earlier ideas into plate
tectonic theory
1858 Antonio Snider; Published first map showing Africa and South America joined together - they
broke apart during Noah’s flood.
1965 J. Tuzo Wilson; Proposed that the Earth is divided into several large rigid plates - these are
moved apart as sea floors spread.
1937 Alexander Du Toit; Published, ‘Our wandering continents’. Compiled a lot of geological evidence
supporting the ‘continental drift’ idea (i.e. matching rocks on either side of the Atlantic basin).
1910 F.B. Taylor; He envisaged a ‘mighty creeping movement’ of the Earth’s crust and collision with
other continents to explain the Tertiary mountain belts, e.g. the Himalayas and the Alps.
1660 Francis Bacon; Noticed that the coastlines of Africa and South America had similar shapes.
1963 Fred Vine and Drummond Matthews; Explained the symmetrical magnetic stripes on the ocean
floor in terms of sea floor spreading.
1956 S.K. Runcorn; Paleomagnetic evidence from continental rocks appeared to show that the
magnetic poles of the Earth had moved - ‘polar wandering’ (it was later shown that not the poles but
the continents had moved).
1904 Eduard Suess; The rock structures on either side of the Atlantic were very similar - but this was
explained by the collapse below sea level of a supposed continent in between – “Atlantis”.
1962 Harry Hess; Proposed that new ocean floor was made in the centres of oceans and then carried
sideways on convection current conveyor belts - this became called the ‘sea floor spreading
hypothesis’.
1929 Arthur Holmes; Proposed that there were convection currents in the mantle below the crust.