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  2. Gondwana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gondwana

    During this period, the extinct glossopterids colonised Gondwana and reached peak diversity in the Late Permian when coal-forming forests covered much of Gondwana. The period also saw the evolution of Voltziales, one of the few plant orders to survive the end-Permian extinction (57% of marine families and 83% of genera went extinct) and which ...

  3. Pan-African orogeny - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pan-African_orogeny

    The Pan-African orogeny was a series of major Neoproterozoic orogenic events which related to the formation of the supercontinents Gondwana and Pannotia about 600 million years ago. [1] This orogeny is also known as the Pan-Gondwanan or Saldanian Orogeny . [ 2 ]

  4. East African Orogeny - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_African_Orogeny

    The notion that Gondwana was assembled during the Late Precambrian from two older fragments along the Pan-African Mozambique Belt was first proposed in the early 1980s. [3] A decade later this continental collision was named the East African Orogeny, but it was also realised that this was not the simple bringing together of two halves.

  5. List of orogenies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_orogenies

    The following is a list of known orogenies organised by continent, starting with the oldest in each. The headings are present-day continents, which may differ from the geography contemporary to the orogenies.

  6. Pannotia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pannotia

    Pannotia was centred on the South Pole, hence its name. Pannotia (from Greek: pan-, "all", -nótos, "south"; meaning "all southern land"), also known as the Vendian supercontinent, Greater Gondwana, and the Pan-African supercontinent, was a relatively short-lived Neoproterozoic supercontinent that formed at the end of the Precambrian during the Pan-African orogeny (650–500 Ma), during the ...

  7. Actually, All Bees Come From an Ancient Supercontinent ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/actually-bees-come-ancient...

    A new study claims that the origin of bees is tens of millions of years older than previously believed.

  8. Rodinia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rodinia

    The result was the formation of Gondwana. The Rodinia hypothesis assumes that rifting did not start everywhere simultaneously. Extensive lava flows and volcanic eruptions of Neoproterozoic age are found on most continents, evidence for large scale rifting about 750 Ma. [1]

  9. Laurasia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laurasia

    Meanwhile, mammals slowly settled in Laurasia from Gondwana in the Triassic, the latter of which was the living area of their Permian ancestors. They split in two groups, with one returning to Gondwana (and stayed there after Pangaea split) while the other staying in Laurasia (until further descendants switched to Gondwana starting from the ...