I do wonder why so people blindly accept Alfred Wegener’s Pangea/Plate Tectonics theory: the continents slide over the planet's surface like they are performing a hoedown. Really? Ask a geologist how Pangea was first formed and you’ll be likely met with silence. Consider instead, Roberto Mantovani’s earlier 1889 theory: travelling through freezing space, the infant Earth (a molten lump of rock) started to cool, forming a crust over its entire surface. Over time, pressure from the trapped molten rock broke out through the weakest points in the crust, pushing that ancient landmass (the continents) apart and creating the fault lines we see today. The process continued, on and off, over millions of years and the Earth grew. Mantovani's theory claims that if you shrank down the Earth, all the continents would fit together entirely. Ask a geologist if this is true.
Multiple theories do exist, I have seen many videos on this theory, and I do see how it's possible. But people do believe different things. I don't want to get too deep, so that's it.
@@AaronIvanovAnims Hi Aaron, thank you for coming back to me, though I have to confess, I'm a little disappointed by your reply. I have asked quite a few academics how Pangea was first formed and if it is true that the continents will all fit together on a smaller planet. No one has answered either question and so I do wonder if they really know. I'm just left with the impression that Wegener's theory is flawed. Imagine what would happen if Mantovani is eventually proved to be correct, the Plate Tectonic theory will become our Flat Earth theory and the reputations of those people who taught and promoted it will end up in the circus.
@@4tnine Even though I did not expect another reply, I will respond again. I do practically see how a growing earth theory could work. But we do have quite a lot of evidence that proves the Pangea theory, for example, that plates slide into, or away from other plates, hence mountains and trenches in the ocean. Also with that info we know the possible way the Mid-Atlantic ridge formed. Yet again, this video is just how I think the earth formed based on continental drift. But you do have a good point.
@@AaronIvanovAnims Hello Aaron, thank you for coming back to me. Referring to the evidence of plate tectonics that you mentioned, contrary to what many exponents of Mantovani’s theory believe, I think subduction would have occurred on an Expanding Earth. Consider, for one moment, that Mantovani’s theory is correct, we can see from the disproportionate expanse of the Pacific Ocean that our planet did not expand evenly like an inflating balloon, but that expansion occurred sporadically along different fault lines at different times in our planet’s history. Is it conceivable then that these sporadic activities of expansion along one fault line could have pushed plates up against neighbouring plates, thereby creating the subduction you described? And where a fault line had split one large continent into two large plates, the sheer size and mass of those plates may have been too great for the erupting material to push them apart. Where would that rising material go? Would it force the edges of those fault lines upwards, creating a range of mountains? I don’t know. There is one way to disprove the Expanding Earth theory: compare rock and fossil samples from around the coastlines of the Pacific Rim: prove that the continents on either side of the Pacific could never have been joined together. Thank you (again) for responding to me and good luck with your future projects.
This is a little inaccurate, according to maps, North America is connected to South America. And also forgot Malaysia, Indonesia and Philippines. But keep it up!
I know i forgot a lot, but i really couldn't be bothered to spend so much time modelling, editing, and animating all those different islands, i just tried getting the main plates in there.
@@AaronIvanovAnims the way how the continents move and australia just doin some flips💀 the continents just no clip at each other this is sooo cursed this should be in the cursed maps subreddit
Step One: hit G on your keyboard and click on the screen where you you want the polygons to go. Step Two: Click Create feature and make the feature type to ClosedContinentalBoundary. Step Three: Set a specific Plate ID and name it. Step Four: Create a new feature collection, save and name it by clicking the red save icon in the bottom right of your screen, for your plates. Reminder: Set the feature collection's name as the same name of the plate. Optional: When you create your plate, the layers tab should show up. (If it dosen't, then press L) Click the drop-down on your new layer and you can change the colours and outline colours. Hope this helps. :)
I do wonder why so people blindly accept Alfred Wegener’s Pangea/Plate Tectonics theory: the continents slide over the planet's surface like they are performing a hoedown. Really? Ask a geologist how Pangea was first formed and you’ll be likely met with silence. Consider instead, Roberto Mantovani’s earlier 1889 theory: travelling through freezing space, the infant Earth (a molten lump of rock) started to cool, forming a crust over its entire surface. Over time, pressure from the trapped molten rock broke out through the weakest points in the crust, pushing that ancient landmass (the continents) apart and creating the fault lines we see today. The process continued, on and off, over millions of years and the Earth grew. Mantovani's theory claims that if you shrank down the Earth, all the continents would fit together entirely. Ask a geologist if this is true.
Multiple theories do exist, I have seen many videos on this theory, and I do see how it's possible. But people do believe different things.
I don't want to get too deep, so that's it.
@@AaronIvanovAnims Hi Aaron, thank you for coming back to me, though I have to confess, I'm a little disappointed by your reply. I have asked quite a few academics how Pangea was first formed and if it is true that the continents will all fit together on a smaller planet. No one has answered either question and so I do wonder if they really know. I'm just left with the impression that Wegener's theory is flawed. Imagine what would happen if Mantovani is eventually proved to be correct, the Plate Tectonic theory will become our Flat Earth theory and the reputations of those people who taught and promoted it will end up in the circus.
@@4tnine Even though I did not expect another reply, I will respond again. I do practically see how a growing earth theory could work. But we do have quite a lot of evidence that proves the Pangea theory, for example, that plates slide into, or away from other plates, hence mountains and trenches in the ocean. Also with that info we know the possible way the Mid-Atlantic ridge formed.
Yet again, this video is just how I think the earth formed based on continental drift. But you do have a good point.
@@AaronIvanovAnims Hello Aaron, thank you for coming back to me. Referring to the evidence of plate tectonics that you mentioned, contrary to what many exponents of Mantovani’s theory believe, I think subduction would have occurred on an Expanding Earth. Consider, for one moment, that Mantovani’s theory is correct, we can see from the disproportionate expanse of the Pacific Ocean that our planet did not expand evenly like an inflating balloon, but that expansion occurred sporadically along different fault lines at different times in our planet’s history. Is it conceivable then that these sporadic activities of expansion along one fault line could have pushed plates up against neighbouring plates, thereby creating the subduction you described? And where a fault line had split one large continent into two large plates, the sheer size and mass of those plates may have been too great for the erupting material to push them apart. Where would that rising material go? Would it force the edges of those fault lines upwards, creating a range of mountains? I don’t know.
There is one way to disprove the Expanding Earth theory: compare rock and fossil samples from around the coastlines of the Pacific Rim: prove that the continents on either side of the Pacific could never have been joined together. Thank you (again) for responding to me and good luck with your future projects.
@@4tnineAnother way to disprove Expanding Earth: How can an object change size whilst not decreasing in density or increasing in mass?
australia just did the backflip
In 0:12
@@EnglishCBALL I don't want the Orthographic Projection I want the Rectangular Projection 1:09
0:27 Look Like Ocean Planet?
Ye
0:27 one global ocean
Ocean?
Series: Earth Not ,Y
0:24
Oceania: WEEEEEEEE
Random landmass: Oh crud
Oceania:REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
Oh no! Australia just doing the backflip
1:29 South America looks like antarctica
Backflip from Australia 0:12 🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺💃💃💃💃💃💃💃
i keep trying to make out the countries before it finishes lol
Nice! how did you make that? it is so cool!
This is a little inaccurate, according to maps, North America is connected to South America. And also forgot Malaysia, Indonesia and Philippines. But keep it up!
Thanks for the feedback, as I appreciate it!
Also this could be used as a future reference point
for other Pangea related videos.
This is the formation of PANGAEA
Indeed
I love it!!!!
So, Australia is one of the oldest pieces of land?
Many other pieces of australia had connected on and have broke off, but as a whole, most of ancient australia still makes up most of modern australia
Forgotten: cuba, cyprus, c.a,the pasific islands, some part of myanmar and thailand, indonesia, timorleste, malaysia and bahrain
I know i forgot a lot, but i really couldn't be bothered to spend so much time modelling, editing, and animating all those different islands, i just tried getting the main plates in there.
1:20 DID SOUTH AMERICA SPLIT?!
i love this mapping :D
0:16 Australia:🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺🕺
Arustralia goes backfilp 😂
Australia just did the backflip😂😂
Australia did backflip
I always thought that Pangea looks like a giant version of Saudi Arabia
Yeah, it kinda looks like that.
3:20 *indonesia has left the chat*
I have a question, how did you make this continental drift? Oh and also, great video!❤
GPlates
South and north america today: we are not touching :(
Pangea looks like colimbia😂
ilike it
so no one gona talk about north america and south america arent conecting
You forget Indonesia Malaysia
He is too lazy to make the islands
this is a supercontinents
Indonesia?
I didn't really wants to spend hours modelling extra islands and plates, so yeah.
how did you make that in gplates?
What do you use
GPlates
no, it is a gplates maker
One question, how do you pass the map to other projections?
At the bottom left of the globe, it should say view.
click the dropdown and you can change it from there
@@AaronIvanovAnims but which app do you use?
@@elhuevon384 GPlates.
@@AaronIvanovAnims oh
@@AaronIvanovAnimsbut how do you do it!!?
This is cursed
How lol
@@AaronIvanovAnims the way how the continents move and australia just doin some flips💀 the continents just no clip at each other this is sooo cursed this should be in the cursed maps subreddit
@@marjoseph2311
It's called continental drift
@@marjoseph2311 Go back to school.
North and South America wasn’t connected at the end 😂of
You forgot to put indonesia
I didn't really wants to spend hours modelling extra islands and plates
@@AaronIvanovAnimswhy are don't put Malaysia and indonesia?
@@AwangAfeef7 I only really wanted to create and animate major landmasses
Missing List: Phillipines : Indonesia & Malaysia : Cuba : Iceland
You forgot to put Thailand
how you make Polygons
Step One: hit G on your keyboard and click on the screen where you you want the polygons to go. Step Two: Click Create feature and make the feature type to ClosedContinentalBoundary. Step Three: Set a specific Plate ID and name it. Step Four: Create a new feature collection, save and name it by clicking the red save icon in the bottom right of your screen, for your plates. Reminder: Set the feature collection's name as the same name of the plate. Optional: When you create your plate, the layers tab should show up. (If it dosen't, then press L) Click the drop-down on your new layer and you can change the colours and outline colours.
Hope this helps. :)
Thnks. But i saying earth continents polygons
You forgot to Put Indonesia and Malaysia🇮🇩🇲🇾
Oceania gets backflip🤣
Mercator +
You forget Philippines
I know, but mapping and creating polygons for every single island would be hard.
Panga 😂😂😂
Can You Make It In The Start
Maybe sometime.
credit algol pls cause you stole the idea without permission
bruh
Pangea ): 🌍🌏🌎
:-p
Pangea
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0:49
1:33
2:06
2:39
3:14
0:49 1:33 2:06 2:39 3:14
0:49 1:33 2:06 2:39 3:14
Why are you copying me?