Continental Drift Theory
No need to take notes
I have taken them for you
"Doesn't the east coast of South
America fit exactly against the west
coast of Africa, as if they had once
been joined?" wrote Wegener to
his future wife in December 1910.
"This is an idea I'll have to pursue."
Alfred was trying to get his
girlfriends father to like him.
Her father was a well-known
geologist!!
Alfred Wegener (Vegener)
As a young scientist,
Wegener was curious
about Earths
continents.
In 1910, Mr. Wegener
formed a hypothesis
which stated all the
continents were once
joined together in a
giant landmass.
He named this
landmass PANGAEA.
Wegener used 3 types of
evidence to prove his theory!
1.Evidence from
landforms
2.Evidence from fossils
3.Evidence from climate
Evidence from landforms
The shapes of the
continents seemed
to fit together.
Mountain ranges
and other features
also lined up.
Evidence from landforms
The jig-saw puzzle
Evidence from landforms
The jig-saw puzzle
Evidence from landforms
The jig-saw puzzle
Evidence from Fossils
Fossils from one
continent
matched fossils
from other
continents.
Wegener used
both plant and
animal fossils.
Glossopteris: a fern
found on the
southern continents
Mesosaurus: a
freshwater
swimming reptile
found in Africa and
South America
Evidence from Fossils
fossil matches
Evidence from Fossils
fossil matches
Evidence from Climate
Wegener looked at
certain areas on
Earth and their
climates
He noted that the
fossils he found on
certain sections of
Earth did not match
the current climate
Glacier scratches in
S. Africa
Evidence from Climate
Antarctic ice
Evidence from Climate
Ice could not have extended this far.
So...continents MUST have moved..
Continental Drift Theory
At first
nobody
believed
Alfred
Wegeners
theory..
WHY YOU
ASK!
He could
not prove
how or
why the
continent
s moved.
Drift away
Scientists still do not appear to understand
sufficiently that all earth sciences must contribute
evidence toward unveiling the state of our planet in
earlier times, and that the truth of the matter can
only be reached by combing all this evidence. . . It is
only by combing the information furnished by all the
earth sciences that we can hope to determine 'truth'
here, that is to say, to find the picture that sets out
all the known facts in the best arrangement and that
therefore has the highest degree of probability.
Further, we have to be prepared always for the
possibility that each new discovery, no matter what
science furnishes it, may modify the conclusions we
draw."
Alfred Wegener.
The Origins of Continents and Oceans (4th edition)