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Tag Archives: Pangaea
100 Years of Drift: Part 2
It’s been 100 years since Alfred Wegener proposed his idea of continental drift. Today’s blog continues the story we began yesterday – the tale of Wegener’s life and the development of his grand idea of mobile continents. This time, we’ll … Continue reading
Posted in Climate, Geology, History
Tagged Alfred Wegener, climatology, continental drift, fossils, Pangaea, Permian
4 Comments
50 Years Ago: How the Continents Fit Together
50 years ago, on October 28, 1965, an unlikely British geophysicist made a map that set the record straight on how the world’s tectonic plates fit together. As a child, Edward Bullard was such a slow learner that his family … Continue reading
Posted in Biography, History, Plate Tectonics
Tagged Atlantic Ocean, Bullard, continental drift, late bloomer, Pangaea
4 Comments
Break-up of the Animals
I just saw this in The Onion. When I lived in Wisconsin some years ago, we considered The Onion to be the state’s finest newspaper. Since then, they got into the digital age and I suppose they dropped the pulp … Continue reading