Continental Drift and Plate Tectonics Continental Drift
Continental Drift and Plate Tectonics Continental Drift
Continental Drift
Today, most people know that landmasses on Earth move around, but people haven’t always
believed this. It wasn’t until the early 20th century that German scientist Alfred Wegener put
forth the idea that the Earth’s continents were drifting. He called this movement Continental
Drift. He was not the first or only person to think this, but he was the first to talk about the
idea publicly.
Wegener came up with this idea because he noticed that the coasts of western Africa and
eastern South America looked like puzzle pieces, which might have once fit together and then
drifted apart. Looking at all of the continents he theorized that they had once been joined
together as a supercontinent (which was later called Pangaea) around 225 million years
ago (see Figure 4). The name Pangaea comes from the Ancient Greek words “pan,”
meaning entire, and “Gaia,” meaning Earth. Pangaea is not the only supercontinent believed to
have existed. Older supercontinents are also believed to have come before Pangaea.
Movement of tectonic plates (Source: U.S. Geological Survey).
The idea of moving landmasses seems obvious now, but Wegener’s Theory of Continental
Drift (as he called it) was not accepted for many years. Why? Well, for one thing, Wegener did
not have a convincing explanation for the cause of the drifting (he suggested that the continents
were moving around due to the Earth’s rotation, which later turned out to be wrong). Secondly,
he was a meteorologist (someone who studies weather), not a geologist, so geologists didn’t
think he knew what he was talking about.
Fossil Evidence
One type of evidence that strongly supported the Theory of Continental Drift is
the fossil record. Fossils of similar types of plants and animals in rocks of a similar age have
been found on the shores of different continents, suggesting that the continents were once
joined. For example, fossils of Mesosaurus, a freshwater reptile, have been found both in
Brazil and western Africa. Also, fossils of the land reptile Lystrosaurus have been found in
rocks of the same age in Africa, India and Antarctica.
1. African Plate
2. Antarctic Plate
3. Eurasian Plate
4. Indo-Australian Plate
5. North American Plate
6. Pacific Plate
7. South American Plate
1. There are two major types of tectonic plates: oceanic and continental.
2. Oceanic plates are denser than continental plates.
3. When an oceanic plate (1) converges with a continental plate (2), the oceanic plate
will move under the continental plate (subduction) because it is denser (3). The oceanic
plate may go deep enough under the continental plate and into the mantle that it melts
and forms magma (4). Increased pressure from beneath the Earth can build up and
cause the magma to seep up through weak spots in the crust (5). Magma under high
pressure sometimes comes through volcanic vents in the form of flowing lava, forming
a volcanic cone (6).