by Outcast_Searcher » Wed 17 Aug 2011, 17:49:44
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse3', 'Y')es, I had 5th grade science and like to watch tv too for my science, like Nova. I have seen all the plate tectonic videos of the continents drifting apart. What captured my attention in this video is all the plates fitting together in a nice but smaller ball. So, do they all fit together as suggested by the video? The fact I'm asking means I don't necessarily believe of accept it. However, plate tectonic theory also says all the plates broke apart, but what it doesn't cover is did they all fit together in a nice little ball, north, south, east and west, as suggested by the video. Seems simple enough and I'm sure plate tetctonics must have covered it somewhere. Anybody?
You use very loose unscientific terms. "The plates fitting together in a nice but smaller ball" makes no sense, in terms of plate tectonics. Continental drift changes the earth's surface composition constantly, but very slowly.
The plates did NOT "break apart". They are still there - about a dozen major ones, pushing against each other. They form the entire crust of the entire earth. They have since the earth's crust was formed, several billion years ago. Their current structure is SHOWN IN PICTURES AND PARAGRAPHS in the link I posted above.
Are you willfully stupid, or just lazy? (This time I DON'T apologize for my tone - at least to you). On the VERY SAME PAGE of the link I posted above, a little further down, we have, for the continents -- which DID break apart:
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')Plate tectonic evidence, combined with fossil and geologic evidence, suggests that the position of the continents 200 million years ago were together as one large continent which we call "Pangaea."
As Pangaea broke up, continental geologic features of Pangaea were torn apart with their fossils as well as populations of plants and animals. The broken up continental pieces of Pangaea moved apart on their respective plates over millions of years to the position we see them now. This idea of continental drift was supported by all the evidence for plate tectonics (like the locations of oceanic ridge/rise systems, deep-sea trenches, volcanoes, and earthquakes). Most of this evidence came from scientific exploration during the 1960s that mapped the oceans of the world.
By the way, if you just LOOK at the major features of the contients like Africa, South America, etc -- it seems pretty obvious that these would fit together reasonable well, if shoved together.
Did you graduate from high school? Did you learn to look things up and think? There are answers to well understood scientific theories, including the evolution of the earth, if you will make a TINY effort to look.