Âé¶¹´«Ã½

Land ahoy

13 April 2002

THE world’s continents have lumped together into a giant land mass not once but at least three times in Earth’s history.

John Rogers of the University of North Carolina has pieced together a picture of a 1.9 billion-year-old supercontinent from the scars of rifts in ancient rocks. The land mass, which he calls Columbia, existed just as single-celled life on Earth started to develop nuclei. He says the massive lump included bits of Africa, India, Australia, America, Greenland and Siberia (Gondwana Research, vol 5, p 5).

The most famous supercontinent, called Pangaea, formed just 250 million years ago. And…

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