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Published byAndrew Ryan Modified over 8 years ago
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Based on Christopher Scotese University of Texas at Arlington Paleomap Project Paleogeographic Tectonic Globes Through Geologic Time Earth History section of this website are full-color paleogeographic maps showing the ancient mountain ranges and shorelines, active plate boundaries, and the extent of paleoclimatic belts. Source: http://www.scotese.com/earth.htm
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This map illustrates the break-up of the supercontinent, Rodinia, which formed 1100 million years ago. The Late Precambrian was an "Ice House" World, much like the present-day. Rodinia
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Late Precambrian Supercontinent and Ice House World
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Cambrian: the beginning of the Paleozoic Era.
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Ancient Oceans Separate the Continents
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Continents Begin to Collide as Paleozoic Oceans Close
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The Devonian Was the Age of Fish!
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During the Early Carboniferous Pangea Begins to Form. Sea Level 100 meters higher than today! (= +100m)
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The Late Carboniferous a Time of Great Coal Swamps
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At the end of the Permian was Greatest Extinction of All Time
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At the end of the Triassic, Pangea began to rift apart.
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Early Jurassic, the Dinosaurs spread across Pangea. Sea Level = 0.0 approx. same as today, continents emergent.
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Pangea Begins to Rift Apart
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New Oceans Begin to Open. Sea Level = +200m; continents flooded by shallow seas.
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The End of the Dinosaurs
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During the Early Cenozoic India began to Collide with Asia.
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The World Assumes a Modern Configuration. Early Miocene: Sea Level +80m (250ft).
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The Earth has been in an Ice House Climate for the last 30 million years.
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The Present-day world has well defined climatic zones.
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This is the way the World may look like 50 million years from now!
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The Atlantic Ocean begins to Close
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"Pangea Ultima" will form 250 million years in the Future
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