The Gondwana supercontinent underwent a 60-degree rotation across Earth's surface during the Early Cambrian period, according to new evidence uncovered by a team of geologists. The study has ...
Long before humans and their ancestors were born, the continents of today, South America, Africa, India, Australia, and Antarctica, were one giant supercontinent called Gondwana. The educational ...
Scientists have discovered a Jurassic tectonic plate boundary that could help to predict what the planet might look like ...
The Gondwana supercontinent broke up millions of years ago. Now, researchers are piecing it back together again. Around 400 million years ago, before Australia was a continent on its own, we were ...
Scientists are a step closer to solving part of a 165-million-year-old giant jigsaw puzzle: the breakup of the supercontinent Gondwana. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ...
Break-up of the supercontinent Gondwana about 130 Million years ago could have led to a completely different shape of the African and South American continent with an ocean south of today’s Sahara ...
The biological narrative of Madagascar is a 180-million-year history of isolation and evolutionary divergence. Once a part of ...
The formation of the Gondwana supercontinent also gave rise to an Antarctic range that has been covered by ice for 500 million years. Underneath miles-deep ice sheets covering Antarctica lies the ...
The Gondwana supercontinent underwent a 60-degree rotation across Earth’s surface during the Early Cambrian period, according to new evidence uncovered by a team of Yale University geologists.
New Haven, Conn.—The Gondwana supercontinent underwent a 60-degree rotation across Earth's surface during the Early Cambrian period, according to new evidence uncovered by a team of Yale University ...