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{{short description|Movement of Earth's continents relative to each other}}
[[Image:Plates tect2 en.svg|thumb|right|255px|Plates in the crust of the earth, according to the [[plate tectonics]] theory]]
{{About|the development of the continental drift theory before 1958|the contemporary theory|Plate tectonics|other uses|Continental Drift (disambiguation)}}
'''Continental drift''' refers to the movement of the [[Earth]]'s [[continents]] relative to each other. The hypothesis that continents 'drift' was first put forward by [[Abraham Ortelius]] in 1596 and was fully developed by [[Alfred Wegener]] in 1912. However, only with the development of the theory of [[plate tectonics]] in the 1960s a sufficient [[geology|geological]] explanation of the cause of their movement could be found. (This article gives an overview about the development of the continental drift hypothesis before 1950. For the contemporary theory, see the article [[plate tectonics]].)
{{distinguish|Continental drip}}


{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2024}}
==History==
===Early history===
[[Image:Antonio Snider-Pellegrini Opening of the Atlantic.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Antonio Snider-Pellegrini's Illustration of the closed and opened Atlantic Ocean (1858).]]
[[Abraham Ortelius]] (1596), [[Francis Bacon]] (1620), [[Benjamin Franklin]], [[Antonio Snider-Pellegrini]] (1858), and others had noted earlier that the shapes of [[continent]]s on either side of the [[Atlantic Ocean]] (most notably, Africa and South America) seem to fit together. W. J. Kious described Ortelius' thoughts in this way:<ref>{{cite book |last=Kious |first=W.J. |coauthors=Tilling, R.I. |title=This Dynamic Earth: the Story of Plate Tectonics |origyear=1996 |origmonth=February |url=http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dynamic/dynamic.html |accessdate=2008-01-29 |edition=Online edition |publisher=U.S. Geological Survey |isbn=0160482208 |chapter=Historical perspective |chapterurl=http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dynamic/historical.html }}</ref>
{{Cquote|Abraham Ortelius in his work Thesaurus Geographicus ... suggested that the Americas were "torn away from Europe and Africa ... by earthquakes and floods" and went on to say: "The vestiges of the rupture reveal themselves, if someone brings forward a map of the world and considers carefully the coasts of the three [continents].}}


'''Continental drift''' is the [[theory]], originating in the early 20th century, that Earth's [[continent]]s move or drift relative to each other over geologic time.<ref name="pubs.usgs.gov" /> The theory of continental drift has since been validated and incorporated into the science of [[plate tectonics]], which studies the movement of the continents as they ride on plates of the Earth's [[lithosphere]].<ref name="Oreskes-2002" />
===Wegener and his predecessors===
The hypothesis that the continents once formed a single landmass, broke up, and drifted to their present locations was fully elaborated by [[Alfred Wegener]] in 1912.
<ref name=weg>{{Citation | author=Wegener, A.| title = Die Entstehung der Kontinente | journal= Peterm. Mitt. | pages=185—195,
253—256, 305—309| year=1912}}</ref>
Wegener himself said in 1929, that he was not the first to propose such an idea.
<ref name=wegb>{{Citation | author=Wegener, A. | title = The Origin of Continents and Oceans | year=1929/1966 |publisher=Courier Dover Publications|ISBN=0486617084}}</ref>
<ref>{{Citation | author=Wegener, A. | title = [[:s:de:Die Entstehung der Kontinente und Ozeane|Die Entstehung der Kontinente und Ozeane, 4. Auflage]] | year=1929 |publisher=Friedrich Vieweg & Sohn Akt. Ges.| place=Braunschweig}}</ref>
He mentioned the following predecessors: [[Franklin Coxworthy]] (between 1848 and 1890),
<ref>{{Citation | author=Coxworthy, F.| title = [http://www.dcd.zju.edu.cn/cgi-bin/udlcgi/ulibreader_iisc/bookReader.cgi?barcode=99999991946789&format=ptiff&curPage=1 Electrical Condition or How and Where our Earth was created] | place=London | publisher=W. J. S. Phillips| year=1848/1924}}</ref>
[[Roberto Mantovani]] (between 1889 and 1909), [[William Henry Pickering]] (1907)
<ref>{{Citation | author=Pickering, W.H| title = [http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1907PA.....15..274P The Place of Origin of the Moon - The Volcani Problems] | journal= Popular Astronomy | pages=274-287| year=1907}}</ref>
and [[Frank Bursley Taylor]] (1908). Wegener clearly stated that he created his theory independent of those authors. And it must be said that Wegener's theory was the most elaborated one.


The speculation that continents might have "drifted" was first put forward by [[Abraham Ortelius]] in 1596. A pioneer of the modern view of mobilism was the Austrian geologist [[Otto Ampferer]].<ref>Kalliope Verbund: ''[https://kalliope-verbund.info/de/eac?eac.id=116302275 Ampferer, Otto (1875–1947) ]''</ref><ref>Helmut W. Flügel: ''[https://www2.uibk.ac.at/downloads/c715/geoalp_1_04/01fluegel.pdf Die virtuelle Welt des Otto Ampferer und die Realität seiner Zeit]''. In: Geo. Alp., Vol. 1, 2004.</ref> The concept was independently and more fully developed by [[Alfred Wegener]] in his 1915 publication, <nowiki/>"The Origin of Continents and Oceans".<ref name="Wegener-1912" /> However, at that time his hypothesis was rejected by many for lack of any motive mechanism. In 1931, the English geologist [[Arthur Holmes]] proposed [[mantle convection]] for that mechanism.
For example: The similarity of southern continent geological formations had led [[Roberto Mantovani]] to conjecture in 1889 and 1909 that all the continents had once been joined into a [[supercontinent]] (now known as [[Pangaea]]). (Regarding the former positions of the southern continents, Wegener himself also noted the similarity of Mantovani's and his own maps). Through [[Volcanism|volcanic]] activity because of [[thermal expansion]] this continent broke, whereby the new continents were drifting away from each other because of further expansion of the rip-zones, where now the oceans lie. However, this led Mantovani to propose an [[expanding earth theory]], which is now considered to be superseded.
<ref>{{Citation | author=Mantovani, R.| author-link =| title = Les fractures de l’écorce terrestre et la théorie de Laplace | journal= Bull. Soc. Sc. et Arts Réunion | pages=41-53| year=1889}}</ref>
<ref>{{Citation | author=Mantovani, R.| title = L’Antarctide |journal= Je m’instruis. La science pour tous |volume=38 | pages=595-597| year=1909}}</ref>
<ref>{{Citation | author=Scalera, G. | contribution =Roberto Mantovani an Italian defender of the continental drift and planetary expansion | contribution-url=http://hdl.handle.net/2122/2017 | editor=Scalera, G. and Jacob, K.-H. |title =Why expanding Earth? – A book in honour of O.C. Hilgenberg | year=2003 | place=Rome | publisher= Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia |pages= 71-74}}</ref>
Some sort of continental drift at constant earth radius was proposed by [[Frank Bursley Taylor]], who suggested in 1908 (published in 1910) that the continents were dragged towards the equator by increased lunar gravity during the [[Cretaceous]], thus forming the Himalaya and Alps on the southern faces. Wegener said that from all those theories, Taylor's theory (although not fully developed) had the most similarities to his own theory.
<ref>{{Citation | author=Taylor, F.B. | title = [http://www.gsajournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&doi=10.1130%2F1052-5173(2005)015%5B29b%3AWTCCA%5D2.0.CO%3B2 Bearing of the tertiary mountain belt on the origin of the earth's plan] | journal= GSA Bulletin | volume=21 |issue=2| pages=179-226| year=1910}}</ref>


== History ==
Wegener was the first to use the phrase "continental drift" (1912, 1915) <ref name=weg /> <ref name=wegb /> (in German "die Verschiebung der Kontinente") and formally publish the hypothesis that the continents had somehow "drifted" apart. And although he presented much evidence for continental drift, he was unable to provide a convincing explanation for the physical processes which might have caused this drift. His suggestion that the continents had been pulled apart by the [[Centrifugal force (fictitious)|centrifugal pseudoforce]] of the Earth's rotation was considered unrealistic by the scientific community.<ref>[http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/geology/techist.html Plate Tectonics: The Rocky History of an Idea]</ref>
{{Further|Timeline of the development of tectonophysics (before 1954)}}


===Controversial years===
=== Early history ===
{{See also|Early modern Netherlandish cartography|l1=Early modern Netherlandish cartography and geography}}
Wegener's hypothesis received support through the controversial years from [[South Africa]]n geologist [[Alexander Du Toit]] as well as from [[Arthur Holmes]]. The idea of continental drift did not become widely accepted even as [[theory]] until the late 1950s. By the 1960s, geological research conducted by [[Robert S. Dietz]], [[Bruce C. Heezen|Bruce Heezen]], and [[Harry Hammond Hess|Harry Hess]], along with a rekindling of the theory including a mechanism by [[J. Tuzo Wilson]] led to widespread acceptance of the theory among geologists.
[[File:Abraham Ortelius by Peter Paul Rubens.jpg|left|thumb|upright=1.1|[[Abraham Ortelius]] by [[Peter Paul Rubens]], 1633]]


[[Abraham Ortelius]] {{Harv|Ortelius|1596}},<ref name="Romm-1994" /> Theodor Christoph Lilienthal (1756),<ref name="Schmeling-2004" /> [[Alexander von Humboldt]] (1801 and 1845),<ref name="Schmeling-2004" /> [[Antonio Snider-Pellegrini]] {{Harv|Snider-Pellegrini|1858}}, and others had noted earlier that the shapes of [[continent]]s on opposite sides of the [[Atlantic Ocean]] (most notably, Africa and South America) seem to fit together.<ref name="Brusatte-2016" /> W. J. Kious described Ortelius's thoughts in this way:<ref name="Kious-2001" />
== Evidence ==
{{blockquote|Abraham Ortelius in his work Thesaurus Geographicus ... suggested that the Americas were "torn away from Europe and Africa ... by earthquakes and floods" and went on to say: "The vestiges of the rupture reveal themselves if someone brings forward a map of the world and considers carefully the coasts of the three [continents]."}}
{{seesubarticle|Plate tectonics}}
''Note: This section contains evidence available to Wegener's contemporaries and predecessors''
[[Image:Snider-Pellegrini Wegener fossil map.gif|thumb|right|Fossil patterns across continents.]]
[[Image:Pangea animation 03.gif|thumb|Pangaea separation animation]]


In 1889, [[Alfred Russel Wallace]] remarked, "It was formerly a very general belief, even amongst geologists, that the great features of the earth's surface, no less than the smaller ones, were subject to continual mutations, and that during the course of known geological time the continents and great oceans had, again and again, changed places with each other."<ref name="Wallace-1889" /> He quotes [[Charles Lyell]] as saying, "Continents, therefore, although permanent for whole geological epochs, shift their positions entirely in the course of ages."<ref name="Lyell-1872" /> and claims that the first to throw doubt on this was [[James Dwight Dana]] in 1849.
The notion that continents have not always been at their present positions was suggested as early as 1596 by the Dutch map maker [[Abraham Ortelius]] in the third edition of his work ''Thesaurus Geographicus''. Ortelius suggested that the Americas, Eurasia and Africa were once joined and have since drifted apart "by earthquakes and floods", creating the modern Atlantic Ocean. For evidence, he wrote: "The vestiges of the rupture reveal themselves, if someone brings forward a map of the world and considers carefully the coasts of the three continents." [[Francis Bacon]] commented on Ortelius' idea in 1620, as did [[Benjamin Franklin]] and [[Alexander von Humboldt]] in later centuries.


[[File:Antonio Snider-Pellegrini Opening of the Atlantic.jpg|right|thumb|upright=1.4|[[Antonio Snider-Pellegrini]]'s Illustration of the closed and opened [[Atlantic Ocean]] (1858)<ref name="Snider-Pellegrini-1858" />]]
Evidence for continental drift is now extensive, in the form of plant and animal [[fossil]]s of the same age found around different continent shores, suggesting that these shores were once joined: the fossils of the freshwater [[crocodile]], found in [[Brazil]] and [[South Africa]], are one example. Another is the discovery of fossils of the aquatic [[reptile]] ''[[Lystrosaurus]]'' from [[Rock (geology)|rock]]s of the same age from locations in [[South America]], [[Africa]], and [[Antarctica]]. There is also living evidence — the same animals being found on two continents. An example of this is a particular [[earthworm]] found in South America and South Africa.


In his ''Manual of Geology'' (1863), Dana wrote, "The continents and oceans had their general outline or form defined in earliest time. This has been proved with regard to North America from the position and distribution of the first beds of the [[Lower Silurian]], – those of the [[Potsdam Sandstone|Potsdam epoch]]. The facts indicate that the continent of North America had its surface near tide-level, part above and part below it (p.196); and this will probably be proved to be the condition in Primordial time of the other continents also. And, if the outlines of the continents were marked out, it follows that the outlines of the oceans were no less so".<ref name="Dana-1863" /> Dana was enormously influential in America—his ''Manual of Mineralogy'' is still in print in revised form—and the theory became known as the ''Permanence theory''.<ref name="Oreskes-2002-2" />
The complementary arrangement of the facing sides of South America and Africa is obvious, but is a temporary coincidence. In millions of years, seafloor spreading, continental drift, and other forces of [[tectonophysics]] will further separate and rotate those two continents. It was this temporary feature which inspired Wegener to study what he defined as continental drift. He never lived to see his hypothesis be proven true.


This appeared to be confirmed by the exploration of the deep sea beds conducted by the [[Challenger expedition|''Challenger'' expedition]], 1872–1876, which showed that contrary to expectation, land debris brought down by rivers to the ocean is deposited comparatively close to the shore on what is now known as the [[continental shelf]]. This suggested that the oceans were a permanent feature of the Earth's surface, rather than them having "changed places" with the continents.<ref name="Wallace-1889" />
Widespread distribution of [[Permo-Carboniferous]] glacial sediments in South America, Africa, Madagascar, Arabia, India, Antarctica and Australia was one of the major pieces of evidence for the theory of continental drift. The continuity of glaciers, inferred from oriented glacial [[striation]]s and deposits called [[tillite]]s, suggested the existence of the supercontinent of [[Gondwana]], which became a central element of the concept of continental drift. Striations indicated glacial flow away from the equator and toward the poles, in modern coordinates, and was a good indicator of the fact that the southern continents had previously been in dramatically different locations, as well as contiguous with each other.


[[Eduard Suess]] had proposed a supercontinent [[Gondwana]] in 1885<ref name="Suess-1885" /> and the [[Tethys Ocean]] in 1893,<ref name="Suess-1893" /> assuming a [[Land bridge#Land bridge theory|land-bridge]] between the present continents submerged in the form of a [[geosyncline]], and [[John Perry (engineer)|John Perry]] had written an 1895 paper proposing that the Earth's interior was fluid, and disagreeing with [[Lord Kelvin]] on the age of the Earth.<ref name="Perry-1895" />
== Debate ==
Before [[geophysics|geophysical]] evidence started accumulating after [[World War II]], the idea of continental drift caused sharp disagreement among geologists. Wegener had introduced his theory in 1912 at a meeting of the German Geological Association. His paper was published that year and expanded into a book in 1915. In 1921 the Berlin Geological Society held a symposium on the theory. In 1922 Wegener's book was translated into English and then it received a wider audience. In 1923 the theory was discussed at conferences by [[Geological Society of France]], the Geological Section of the [[British Association for the Advancement of Science]], and the [[Royal Geological Society]]. The theory was carefully but critically reviewed in the journal ''Nature'' by [[Philip Lake]].<ref>P. Lake, 'Wegener's Hypothesis of Continental Drift', Nature CXI, 1923a, pp. 226-228</ref> On [[November 15]], [[1926]], the [[American Association of Petroleum Geologists]] (AAPG) held a symposium at which the continental drift hypothesis was vigorously debated. The resulting papers were published in 1928 under the title ''Theory of continental drift''. Wegener himself contributed a paper to this volume.<ref>Friedlander, Michael W. (1995) ''At the Fringes of Science'', pages 21-27, Westview, ISBN 0-8133-2200-6, 1998 edition with new epilog: ISBN 0-8133-9060-5 </ref>


=== Wegener and his predecessors ===
One of the main problems with Wegener's theory was that he believed that the continents "plowed" through the rocks of the ocean basins. Most geologists did not believe that this could be possible. In fact, the biggest objection to Wegener was that he did not have an acceptable theory of the forces that ''caused'' the continents to drift. He also ignored counter-arguments and evidence contrary to his theory and seemed too willing to interpret ambiguous evidence as being favorable to his theory.<ref>William F. Williams, editor (2000) ''[[Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience]]: From Alien Abductions to Zone Therapy'' Facts on File p. 59 ISBN 0-8160-3351-X </ref> For their part, the geologists ignored Wegener's copious body of evidence, allowing their adherence to a ''theory'' to override the actual ''data'', when the [[scientific method]] would seem to demand the reverse approach.
[[File:Alfred Wegener 1910.jpg|left|thumb|upright=.75|Alfred Wegener]]


Apart from the earlier speculations mentioned above, the idea that the American continents had once formed a single landmass with Eurasia and Africa was postulated by several scientists before [[Alfred Wegener]]'s 1912 paper.<ref name="Wegener-1912" /> Although Wegener's theory was formed independently and was more complete than those of his predecessors, Wegener later credited a number of past authors with similar ideas:<ref name="Wegener-1966" /><ref name="Wegener-1929" /> Franklin Coxworthy (between 1848 and 1890),<ref name="Coxworthy-1924" /> [[Roberto Mantovani]] (between 1889 and 1909), [[William Henry Pickering]] (1907)<ref name="Pickering-1907" /> and [[Frank Bursley Taylor]] (1908).<ref name="Taylor-1910" />
[[Plate tectonics]], a modern update of the old ideas of Wegener about "plowing" continents, accommodates continental motion through the mechanism of [[seafloor spreading]]. New rock is created by volcanism at mid-ocean ridges and returned to the Earth's mantle at ocean trenches. Remarkably, in the 1928 AAPG volume, [[G. A. F. Molengraaf]] of the Delft Institute (now [[Delft University of Technology|University]]) of Technology proposed a recognizable form of seafloor spreading in order to account for the opening of the [[Atlantic Ocean]] as well as the [[East Africa Rift]]. Arthur Holmes (an early supporter of Wegener) suggested that the movement of continents was the result of convection currents driven by the heat of the interior of the Earth, rather than the continents floating on the mantle. In the words of [[Carl Sagan]],<ref>Sagan, Carl. (1997) ''[[The Demon-Haunted World]], Science As a Candle in the Dark'', Ballantine Books, ISBN 0-345-40946-9. 1996 hardback edition: Random House, ISBN 0-394-53512-X pp. 302-03</ref> it is more like the continents are being carried on a conveyor belt than floating or drifting. The ideas of Molengraaf and of Holmes led to the theory of plate tectonics, which replaced the theory of continental drift, and became the accepted theory in the 1960s (based on data that started to accumulate in the late 1950s).


The similarity of southern continent geological formations had led [[Roberto Mantovani]] to conjecture in 1889 and 1909 that all the continents had once been joined into a [[supercontinent]]; Wegener noted the similarity of Mantovani's and his own maps of the former positions of the southern continents. In Mantovani's conjecture, this continent broke due to [[Volcanism|volcanic]] activity caused by [[thermal expansion]], and the new continents drifted away from each other because of further expansion of the rip-zones, where the oceans now lie. This led Mantovani to propose a now-discredited [[Expanding Earth theory]].<ref name="Mantovani-1889" /><ref name="Mantovani-1909" /><ref name="Scalera-2003" />
However, acceptance was gradual. Nowadays it is universally supported; but even in 1977 a textbook could write the relatively weak: "a poll of geologists now would probably show a substantial majority who favor the idea of drift" and devote a section to a serious consideration of the objections to the theory.<ref>Davis, Richard A. (1977) ''Principles of Oceanography'', 2nd edition, [[Addison-Wesley]], ISBN 0-201-01464-5 </ref>


Continental drift without expansion was proposed by [[Frank Bursley Taylor]],<ref name="Lane-1944" /> who suggested in 1908 (published in 1910) that the continents were moved into their present positions by a process of "continental creep",<ref name="Taylor-1910a" /><ref name="Frankel-2012" /> later proposing a mechanism of increased tidal forces during the [[Cretaceous]] dragging the crust towards the equator. He was the first to realize that one of the effects of continental motion would be the formation of mountains, attributing the formation of the Himalayas to the collision between the [[Indian subcontinent]] with Asia.<ref name="Powell-2015" /> Wegener said that of all those theories, Taylor's had the most similarities to his own. For a time in the mid-20th century, the theory of continental drift was referred to as the "Taylor-Wegener hypothesis".<ref name="Lane-1944" /><ref name="Powell-2015" /><ref name="Hansen" /><ref name="Wood-2016" />
==Notes and references==
{{Reflist}}
* {{cite book |last=Le Grand |first=H. E. |authorlink= |title=Drifting Continents and Shifting Theories |edition= |year= 1988 |publisher=Cambridge University |isbn= 0-521-31105-5 }}


Alfred Wegener first presented his hypothesis to the German Geological Society on 6 January 1912.<ref name="Wegener-1912" /> He proposed that the continents had once formed a single landmass, called [[Pangaea]], before breaking apart and drifting to their present locations.<ref name="Wegenerproofs">{{cite web |url = http://www.bbm.me.uk/portsdown/PH_061_History_b.htm |title = Wegener and his proofs |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060505053619/http://www.bbm.me.uk/portsdown/PH_061_History_b.htm |archive-date=5 May 2006 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
==External links==
*[http://www.ux1.eiu.edu/~cfjps/1300/cont_drift.html A brief introduction to Plate Tectonics, based on the work of Alfred Wegener.]
*[http://www.scotese.com/earth.htm Maps of continental drift, from the Precambrian to the future]
*[http://kids.earth.nasa.gov/archive/pangaea/evidence.html Four main evidences of the Continental Drift theory]
*[http://www.bbm.me.uk/portsdown/PH_061_History_b.htm Wegener and his proofs]


Wegener was the first to use the phrase "continental drift" (1912, 1915)<ref name="Wegener-1912" /><ref name="Wegener-1966" /> ({{langx|de|"die Verschiebung der Kontinente"}}) and to publish the hypothesis that the continents had somehow "drifted" apart. Although he presented much evidence for continental drift, he was unable to provide a convincing explanation for the physical processes which might have caused this drift. He suggested that the continents had been pulled apart by the [[Centrifugal force (fictitious)|centrifugal pseudoforce]] ({{lang|de|Polflucht}}) of the Earth's rotation or by a small component of astronomical [[precession]], but calculations showed that the force was not sufficient.<ref name="PlateTectonics-2011" /> The {{lang|de|[[Polflucht]]}} hypothesis was also studied by [[Paul Sophus Epstein]] in 1920 and found to be implausible.
[[Category:Plate tectonics]]


=== Rejection of Wegener's theory, 1910s–1950s ===
[[ar:نظرية الانجراف القاري]]
Although now accepted, and even with a minority of scientific proponents over the decades, the theory of continental drift was largely rejected for many years, with evidence in its favor considered insufficient. One problem was that a plausible driving force was missing.<ref name="pubs.usgs.gov" /> A second problem was that Wegener's estimate of the speed of continental motion, {{cvt|250|cm/y|round=10}}, was implausibly high.<ref name="UniCalifMusPaleontology" /> (The currently accepted rate for the separation of the Americas from Europe and Africa is about {{cvt|2.5|cm/y|0}}.)<ref name="Unavco-2015" /> Furthermore, Wegener was treated less seriously because he was not a geologist. Even today, the details of the forces propelling the plates are poorly understood.<ref name="pubs.usgs.gov" />
[[bn:মহাদেশীয় প্রবাহ]]

[[br:Dilec'hiadur ar c'hevandiroù]]
The English geologist [[Arthur Holmes]] championed the theory of continental drift at a time when it was deeply unfashionable. He proposed in 1931 that the Earth's mantle contained convection cells which dissipated heat produced by radioactive decay and moved the crust at the surface.<ref name="Holmes-1931" /> His ''Principles of Physical Geology'', ending with a chapter on continental drift, was published in 1944.<ref name="Holmes-1944" />
[[bg:Континентален дрейф]]

[[cs:Kontinentální drift]]
Geological maps of the time showed huge [[land bridge]]s spanning the Atlantic and Indian oceans to account for the similarities of fauna and flora and the divisions of the Asian continent in the Permian period, but failing to account for glaciation in India, Australia and South Africa.<ref name="Wells-1931" />
[[da:Kontinentaldrift]]

[[de:Kontinentaldrift]]
====The fixists====
[[et:Mandrite triiv]]
[[Hans Stille]] and [[Leopold Kober]] opposed the idea of continental drift and worked on a "fixist"<ref name="Sen30" /> [[geosyncline]] model with [[Contracting Earth|Earth contraction]] playing a key role in the formation of [[orogen]]s.<ref name="Sen28" /><ref name="Sen29" /> Other geologists who opposed continental drift were [[Bailey Willis]], [[Charles Schuchert]], Rollin Chamberlin, Walther Bucher and [[Walther Penck]].<ref name="Sen31" /><ref name="Bremer-1983">{{Cite journal|title=Albrecht Penck (1858–1945) and Walther Penck (1888–1923), two German geomorphologists|journal=[[Zeitschrift für Geomorphologie]]|last=Bremer|first=Hanna|volume=27|pages=129–138|issue=2|year=1983|doi=10.1127/zfg/27/1983/129|bibcode=1983ZGm....27..129B}}</ref> In 1939 an international geological conference was held in [[Frankfurt]].<ref name="Frankel403" /> This conference came to be dominated by the fixists, especially as those geologists specializing in tectonics were all fixists except Willem van der Gracht.<ref name="Frankel403" /> Criticism of continental drift and mobilism was abundant at the conference not only from tectonicists but also from sedimentological (Nölke), paleontological (Nölke), mechanical (Lehmann) and oceanographic ([[Carl Troll|Troll]], [[Georg Wüst|Wüst]]) perspectives.<ref name="Frankel403" /><ref name="Frankel405" /> [[Hans Cloos]], the organizer of the conference, was also a fixist<ref name="Frankel403" /> who together with Troll held the view that excepting the [[Pacific Ocean]] continents were not radically different from oceans in their behaviour.<ref name="Frankel405" /> The mobilist theory of [[Émile Argand]] for the [[Alpine orogeny]] was criticized by Kurt Leuchs.<ref name="Frankel403" /> The few drifters and mobilists at the conference appealed to [[biogeography]] (Kirsch, Wittmann), [[paleoclimatology]] ([[Kurt Wegener|Wegener, K]]), [[paleontology]] (Gerth) and [[geodesy|geodetic]] measurements (Wegener, K).<ref name="Frankel407" /> F. Bernauer correctly equated [[Southern Peninsula (Iceland)|Reykjanes]] in south-west [[Iceland]] with the [[Mid-Atlantic Ridge]], arguing with this that the floor of the Atlantic Ocean was undergoing [[extensional tectonics|extension]] just like Reykjanes. Bernauer thought this extension had drifted the continents only {{cvt|100-200|km|round=10}} apart, the approximate width of the [[Volcanism of Iceland|volcanic zone in Iceland]].<ref name="Frankel409" />
[[es:Deriva continental]]

[[eo:Kontinenta drivo]]
[[David Attenborough]], who attended university in the second half of the 1940s, recounted an incident illustrating its lack of acceptance then: "I once asked one of my lecturers why he was not talking to us about continental drift and I was told, sneeringly, that if I could prove there was a force that could move continents, then he might think about it. The idea was moonshine, I was informed."<ref name="McKie-2012" />
[[eu:Kontinenteen jitoa]]

[[gl:Deriva continental]]
As late as 1953—just five years before [[Samuel Warren Carey|Carey]]<ref name="Carey-1958" /> introduced the theory of [[plate tectonics]]—the theory of continental drift was rejected by the physicist Scheidegger on the following grounds.<ref name="Scheidegger-1953" />
[[ko:대륙이동설]]
* First, it had been shown that floating masses on a rotating [[geoid]] would collect at the equator, and stay there. This would explain one, but only one, mountain building episode between any pair of continents; it failed to account for earlier [[Orogeny|orogenic]] episodes.
[[hr:Pomicanje kontinenata]]
* Second, masses floating freely in a fluid substratum, like icebergs in the ocean, should be in [[Isostasy|isostatic]] equilibrium (in which the forces of gravity and buoyancy are in balance). But gravitational measurements showed that many areas are not in isostatic equilibrium.
[[id:Teori Continental Drift]]
* Third, there was the problem of why some parts of the Earth's surface (crust) should have solidified while other parts were still fluid. Various attempts to explain this foundered on other difficulties.
[[it:Deriva dei continenti]]

[[he:נדידת היבשות]]
=== Road to acceptance ===
[[ms:Teori hanyutan benua]]
{{Main|Plate tectonics}}
[[nl:Continentverschuiving]]

[[ja:大陸移動説]]
From the 1930s to the late 1950s, works by [[Felix Andries Vening Meinesz|Vening-Meinesz]], Holmes, [[Johannes Herman Frederik Umbgrove|Umbgrove]], and numerous others outlined concepts that were close or nearly identical to modern plate tectonics theory. In particular, the English geologist Arthur Holmes proposed in 1920 that plate junctions might lie beneath the [[sea]], and in 1928 that convection currents within the mantle might be the driving force.<ref name="Holmes-1928" /> Holmes's views were particularly influential: in his bestselling textbook, ''Principles of Physical Geology,'' he included a chapter on continental drift, proposing that Earth's [[Mantle (geology)|mantle]] contained [[convection cell]]s which dissipated [[radioactive]] heat and moved the crust at the surface.<ref name="Wessel-2007" /><ref name="Vine-1966" /> Holmes's proposal resolved the phase disequilibrium objection (the underlying fluid was kept from solidifying by radioactive heating from the core). However, scientific communication in the 1930s and 1940s was inhibited by [[World War II]], and the theory still required work to avoid foundering on the [[orogeny]] and [[isostasy]] objections. Worse, the most viable forms of the theory predicted the existence of convection cell boundaries reaching deep into the Earth, that had yet to be observed.{{citation needed|date=May 2018}}
[[no:Kontinentaldrift]]

[[pl:Wędrówka kontynentów]]
In 1947, a team of scientists led by [[Maurice Ewing]] confirmed the existence of a rise in the central Atlantic Ocean, and found that the floor of the seabed beneath the sediments was chemically and physically different from continental crust.<ref name="Lippsett-2001" /><ref name="Lippsett-2006" /> As oceanographers continued to [[Bathymetry|bathymeter]] the ocean basins, a system of mid-oceanic ridges was detected. An important conclusion was that along this system, new ocean floor was being created, which led to the concept of the "[[Great Global Rift]]".<ref name="Heezen-1960" />
[[pt:Deriva continental]]

[[ru:Теория дрейфа материков]]
Meanwhile, scientists began recognizing odd magnetic variations across the ocean floor using devices developed during World War II to detect submarines.<ref name="LATimes-2009" /> Over the next decade, it became increasingly clear that the magnetization patterns were not anomalies, as had been originally supposed. In a series of papers published between 1959 and 1963, Heezen, Dietz, Hess, Mason, Vine, Matthews, and [[Lawrence Morley|Morley]] collectively realized that the magnetization of the ocean floor formed extensive, zebra-like patterns: one stripe would exhibit normal polarity and the adjoining stripes reversed polarity.<ref name="Mason-1961" /><ref name="Korgen-1995" /><ref name="Spiess-2003" /> The best explanation was the "conveyor belt" or [[Vine–Matthews–Morley hypothesis]]. New [[magma]] from deep within the Earth rises easily through these weak zones and eventually erupts along the crest of the ridges to create new oceanic crust. The new crust is magnetized by the Earth's magnetic field, which undergoes [[Geomagnetic reversal|occasional reversals]]. Formation of new crust then displaces the magnetized crust apart, akin to a conveyor belt – hence the name.<ref name="Heirtzler-1966" />
[[simple:Continental drift]]

[[sk:Pohyb kontinentov]]
Without workable alternatives to explain the stripes, geophysicists were forced to conclude that Holmes had been right: ocean rifts were sites of perpetual orogeny at the boundaries of convection cells.<ref name="LePichon-1968" /><ref name="McKenzie-1967" /> By 1967, barely two decades after discovery of the mid-oceanic rifts, and a decade after discovery of the striping, plate tectonics had become axiomatic to modern geophysics.
[[sr:Померање континената]]

[[fi:Mannerliikunnot]]
In addition, [[Marie Tharp]], in collaboration with [[Bruce Heezen]], who was initially sceptical of Tharp's observations that her maps confirmed continental drift theory, provided essential corroboration, using her skills in cartography and seismographic data, to confirm the theory.<ref name="Barton-2002" /><ref name="Blakemore-2016" /><ref name="Evans-2002" /><ref name="Doel-2006" /><ref name="Wills-2016" />
[[th:การเลื่อนไหลของทวีป]]

[[vi:Trôi dạt lục địa]]
====Modern evidence====
[[uk:Дрифтова теорія]]
Geophysicist [[Jack Oliver (scientist)|Jack Oliver]] is credited with providing seismologic evidence supporting plate tectonics which encompassed and superseded continental drift with the article "Seismology and the New Global Tectonics", published in 1968, using data collected from seismologic stations, including those he set up in the South Pacific.<ref name="NYTimes-2011" /><ref name="Isacks-1968" /> The modern theory of [[plate tectonics]], refining Wegener, explains that there are two kinds of crust of different composition: [[continental crust]] and [[oceanic crust]], both floating above a much deeper "[[Plasticity (physics)|plastic]]" mantle. Continental crust is inherently lighter. Oceanic crust is created at [[Seafloor spreading|spreading centers]], and this, along with [[subduction]], drives the system of plates in a chaotic manner, resulting in continuous [[orogeny]] and areas of isostatic imbalance.
[[zh:大陆漂移学说]]

[[File:Mesosaurus.png|thumb|''Mesosaurus'' skeleton, MacGregor, 1908]]

[[File:Snider-Pellegrini Wegener fossil map.svg|thumb|upright=1.5|Fossil patterns across continents ([[Gondwanaland]]) ]]

Evidence for the movement of continents on tectonic plates is now extensive. Similar plant and animal [[fossil]]s are found around the shores of different continents, suggesting that they were once joined. The fossils of ''[[Mesosaurus]]'', a freshwater reptile rather like a small crocodile, found both in [[Brazil]] and [[South Africa]], are one example; another is the discovery of fossils of the land [[reptile]] ''[[Lystrosaurus]]'' in [[Rock (geology)|rocks]] of the same age at locations in [[Africa]], [[India]], and [[Antarctica]].<ref name="USGS" /> There is also living evidence, with the same animals being found on two continents. Some [[earthworm]] families (such as Ocnerodrilidae, Acanthodrilidae, Octochaetidae) are found in South America and Africa.

The complementary arrangement of the facing sides of South America and Africa is an obvious and temporary coincidence. In millions of years, [[slab pull]], [[ridge-push]], and other forces of [[tectonophysics]] will further separate and rotate those two continents. It was that temporary feature that inspired Wegener to study what he defined as continental drift although he did not live to see his hypothesis generally accepted.

The widespread distribution of [[Permo-Carboniferous]] glacial sediments in South America, Africa, Madagascar, Arabia, India, Antarctica and Australia was one of the major pieces of evidence for the theory of continental drift. The continuity of glaciers, inferred from oriented [[glacial striation]]s and deposits called [[tillite]]s, suggested the existence of the supercontinent of [[Gondwana]], which became a central element of the concept of continental drift. Striations indicated glacial flow away from the equator and toward the poles, based on continents' current positions and orientations, and supported the idea that the southern continents had previously been in dramatically different locations that were contiguous with one another.<ref name="Wegener-1966" />

== See also ==
* {{annotated link|Geological history of Earth}}
* [[Israel C. White]]

== Citations ==
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<ref name="Sen30">[[#Sengor1982|Şengör (1982)]], p. 30</ref>
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<ref name="Sen29">[[#Sengor1982|Şengör (1982)]], p. 29</ref>
<ref name="Sen31">[[#Sengor1982|Şengör (1982)]], p. 31</ref>
<ref name="Frankel403">[[#Frankel|Frankel (2012)]], p. 403</ref>
<ref name="Frankel405">[[#Frankel|Frankel (2012)]], p. 405</ref>
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<ref name="Oreskes-2002">{{Harvnb|Oreskes|2002|p=324}}.</ref>
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<ref name="Suess-1885">Eduard Suess, ''Das Antlitz der Erde'' (The Face of the Earth), vol. 1 (Leipzig, (Germany): G. Freytag, 1885), [http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015048893047;view=1up;seq=792 page 768.] From p. 768: ''"Wir nennen es Gondwána-Land, nach der gemeinsamen alten Gondwána-Flora, ... "'' (We name it Gondwána-Land, after the common ancient flora of Gondwána ... )</ref>
<ref name="Suess-1893">Edward Suess (March 1893) [https://books.google.com/books?id=yQUVAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA180 "Are ocean depths permanent?"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170205023611/https://books.google.com/books?id=yQUVAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA180|date=5 February 2017}}, ''Natural Science: A Monthly Review of Scientific Progress'' (London), '''2''' : 180- 187. From page 183: "This ocean we designate by the name "Tethys", after the sister and consort of Oceanus. The latest successor of the Tethyan Sea is the present Mediterranean."</ref>
<ref name="Perry-1895">Perry, John (1895) "On the age of the earth", ''Nature'', '''51''' : [http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015038750868;view=1up;seq=266 224–227] {{Webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20150217234720/http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015038750868;view=1up;seq=266|date=17 February 2015}}, 341–342, 582–585.</ref>
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<ref name="Scalera-2003">{{Citation | author=Scalera, G. | contribution =Roberto Mantovani an Italian defender of the continental drift and planetary expansion |editor1=Scalera, G. |editor2=Jacob, K.-H. |title =Why expanding Earth? – A book in honour of O.C. Hilgenberg | year=2003 | place=Rome | publisher= National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology |pages= 71–74| hdl =2122/2017}}</ref>
<ref name="Taylor-1910a">{{Citation | author=Taylor, F.B. | title = Bearing of the tertiary mountain belt on the origin of the earth's plan | journal= GSA Bulletin | volume=21 |issue=2| pages=179–226| year=1910 | doi= 10.1130/GSAB-21-179| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180601200620/ftp://rock.geosociety.org/pub/GSAToday/gt0507.pdf| url=ftp://rock.geosociety.org/pub/GSAToday/gt0507.pdf|url-status=dead | bibcode = 1910GSAB...21..179T| archive-date = 1 June 2018 }}</ref>
<ref name="Frankel-2012">Henry R. Frankel, "Wegener and Taylor develop their theories of continental drift", in ''The Continental Drift Controversy'' Volume 1: ''Wegener and the Early Debate'', pp. 38–80, Cambridge University Press, 2012. {{ISBN|9780521875042}} {{doi|10.1017/CBO9780511842368.004}}</ref>
<ref name="Hansen">Hansen, L. T., ''Some considerations of, and additions to the Taylor-Wegener hypothesis of continental displacement'', Los Angeles, 1946. {{OCLC|1247437 OCLC}}</ref>
<ref name="Wood-2016">R. M. Wood, [https://books.google.com/books?id=3TO4uTA30NAC&pg=PA254 Coming Apart at the Seams] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160514222416/https://books.google.com/books?id=3TO4uTA30NAC&pg=PA254 |date=14 May 2016}}, ''New Scientist'', 24 January 1980</ref>
<ref name="PlateTectonics-2011">{{cite web |url=http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/geology/techist.html |title=Plate Tectonics: The Rocky History of an Idea |quote=Wegener's inability to provide an adequate explanation of the forces responsible for continental drift and the prevailing belief that the earth was solid and immovable resulted in the scientific dismissal of his theories. |access-date=23 August 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110411031414/http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/geology/techist.html |archive-date=11 April 2011 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
<ref name="UniCalifMusPaleontology">University of California Museum of Paleontology, [http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/wegener.html Alfred Wegener (1880–1930)] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171208011353/http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/wegener.html |date=8 December 2017}} (accessed 30 April 2015).</ref>
<ref name="Unavco-2015">Unavco [http://www.unavco.org/software/geodetic-utilities/plate-motion-calculator/plate-motion-calculator.html Plate Motion Calculator] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150425002611/http://www.unavco.org/software/geodetic-utilities/plate-motion-calculator/plate-motion-calculator.html |date=25 April 2015}} (accessed 30 April 2015).</ref>
<ref name="Holmes-1931">{{cite journal|title=Radioactivity and Earth Movements|first=Arthur|last=Holmes|author-link=Arthur Holmes|journal=Transactions of the Geological Society of Glasgow|volume=18|issue=3|year=1931|pages=559–606|url=http://www.mantleplumes.org/WebDocuments/Holmes1931.pdf|doi=10.1144/transglas.18.3.559|s2cid=122872384|access-date=15 January 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191009101823/http://www.mantleplumes.org/WebDocuments/Holmes1931.pdf|archive-date=9 October 2019|url-status=live}}</ref>
<ref name="Holmes-1944">{{Cite book |last=Holmes |first=Arthur |author-link= Arthur Holmes|title=Principles of Physical Geology |edition=1st |place=Edinburgh |publisher=Thomas Nelson & Sons |year=1944 |isbn=978-0-17-448020-4}}</ref>
<ref name="Wells-1931">See map based on the work of the American paleontologist [[Charles Schuchert]] in {{citation|title=The Science of life|first1=H. G.|last1=Wells|first2=Julian|last2=Huxley|first3=G. P.|last3=Wells|year=1931|page=445|url=https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.221951/page/n465/mode/2up}}</ref>
<ref name="McKie-2012">{{cite news |title=David Attenborough: force of nature |first=Robin |last=McKie |url=https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2012/oct/26/richard-attenborough-climate-global-arctic-environment |newspaper=[[The Observer]] |location=London |date=28 October 2012 |access-date=29 October 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131031164253/http://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2012/oct/26/richard-attenborough-climate-global-arctic-environment |archive-date=31 October 2013 |url-status=live}}</ref>
<ref name="Carey-1958">{{Cite news |last1=Carey |first1=S. W. |year=1958|editor1-last=Carey |editor1-first=S. W. |title=Continental Drift—A symposium |publisher=Univ. of Tasmania |place=Hobart |pages=177–363}}</ref>
<ref name="Scheidegger-1953">{{citation|last= Scheidegger |first=Adrian E. |title=Examination of the physics of theories of orogenesis |journal=GSA Bulletin |year=1953|volume= 64|issue=2 |pages= 127–150 |doi=10.1130/0016-7606(1953)64[127:EOTPOT]2.0.CO;2|bibcode = 1953GSAB...64..127S}}</ref>
<ref name="Holmes-1928">{{cite journal |last=Holmes |first=Arthur |year=1928 |title=Radioactivity and Earth movements |journal=Transactions of the Geological Society of Glasgow |volume=18 |issue=3 |pages=559–606|doi=10.1144/transglas.18.3.559 |s2cid=122872384}}; see also {{cite book |last=Holmes |first=Arthur |author-link= Arthur Holmes|year=1978 |title=Principles of Physical Geology |edition=3 |publisher=Wiley |pages=640–41 |isbn=978-0-471-07251-5}} and {{cite journal |title=Arthur Holmes and continental drift |last=Frankel |first=Henry |journal=The British Journal for the History of Science |volume=11 |issue=2 |date=July 1978 |pages=130–50 |jstor=4025726 |doi=10.1017/S0007087400016551|s2cid=145405854 }}.</ref>
<ref name="Wessel-2007">{{citation |last1=Wessel |first1=P. |last2=Müller |first2=R. D. |year=2007 |chapter=Plate Tectonics |title=Treatise on Geophysics |publisher=Elsevier |volume=6 |pages=49–98}}</ref>
<ref name="Vine-1966">{{Cite journal | last1 = Vine | first1 = F. J. | title = Spreading of the Ocean Floor: New Evidence | doi = 10.1126/science.154.3755.1405 | journal = Science | volume = 154 | issue = 3755 | pages = 1405–1415 | year = 1966 | pmid = 17821553|bibcode = 1966Sci...154.1405V | s2cid = 44362406}}</ref>
<ref name="Lippsett-2001">{{cite journal |last=Lippsett |first=Laurence |url=http://www.columbia.edu/cu/alumni/Magazine/Winter2001/ewing.html |title=Maurice Ewing and the Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory |journal=Living Legacies |year=2001 |access-date=4 March 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180112030533/http://www.columbia.edu/cu/alumni/Magazine/Winter2001/ewing.html |archive-date=12 January 2018 |url-status=live}}</ref>
<ref name="Lippsett-2006">{{cite book |last=Lippsett |first=Laurence |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=l1os3mwQkxYC&pg=PR9|chapter=Maurice Ewing and the Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory |editor=William Theodore De Bary |editor2=Jerry Kisslinger |editor3=Tom Mathewson |title=Living Legacies at Columbia |year=2006 |access-date=22 June 2010|isbn=978-0-231-13884-0|pages=277–97 |publisher=Columbia University Press}}</ref>
<ref name="Heezen-1960">{{cite journal |last=Heezen |first=B. |year=1960 |title=The rift in the ocean floor |journal=[[Scientific American]] |volume=203 |pages=98–110 |doi=10.1038/scientificamerican1060-98 |issue=4|bibcode=1960SciAm.203d..98H}}</ref>
<ref name="LATimes-2009">{{citation|url=http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la-me-vacquier24-2009jan24,0,3328591.story|journal=Los Angeles Times|title=Victor Vacquier Sr., 1907–2009: Geophysicist was a master of magnetics|date=24 January 2009|page=B24|access-date=20 May 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140108214147/http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la-me-vacquier24-2009jan24,0,3328591.story|archive-date=8 January 2014|url-status=live}}.</ref>
<ref name="Mason-1961">{{cite journal |last1=Mason |first1=Ronald G. |last2=Raff |first2=Arthur D. |year=1961 |title=Magnetic survey off the west coast of the United States between 32°N latitude and 42°N latitude |journal=Bulletin of the Geological Society of America |volume=72 |pages=1259–66|doi=10.1130/0016-7606(1961)72[1259:MSOTWC]2.0.CO;2 |issn=0016-7606|issue=8|bibcode= 1961GSAB...72.1259M}}</ref>
<ref name="Korgen-1995">{{cite journal |last=Korgen |first=Ben J. |year=1995 |title=A voice from the past: John Lyman and the plate tectonics story |journal=Oceanography |volume=8 |issue=1 |pages=19–20 |doi=10.5670/oceanog.1995.29 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
<ref name="Spiess-2003">{{cite journal |last1=Spiess |first1=Fred |last2=Kuperman |first2=William |year=2003 |title=The Marine Physical Laboratory at Scripps |journal=Oceanography |volume=16 |issue=3 |pages=45–54 |doi=10.5670/oceanog.2003.30 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
<ref name="Heirtzler-1966">See summary in {{cite journal |last1=Heirtzler |first1=James R. |first2=Xavier |last2=Le Pichon |first3=J. Gregory |last3=Baron |year=1966 |title=Magnetic anomalies over the Reykjanes Ridge |journal=Deep-Sea Research |volume=13 |issue=3 |pages=427–32 |doi=10.1016/0011-7471(66)91078-3 |bibcode= 1966DSRA...13..427H}}</ref>
<ref name="LePichon-1968">{{cite journal |last=Le Pichon |first=Xavier |date=15 June 1968 |title=Sea-floor spreading and continental drift |journal=Journal of Geophysical Research |volume=73 |issue= 12 |pages=3661–97 |doi=10.1029/JB073i012p03661 |bibcode=1968JGR....73.3661L}}</ref>
<ref name="McKenzie-1967">{{cite journal |last1=Mc Kenzie |first1=D. |last2=Parker |first2=R.L. |year=1967 |title=The North Pacific: an example of tectonics on a sphere |journal=Nature |volume=216 |pages=1276–1280 |doi=10.1038/2161276a0 |issue=5122 |bibcode= 1967Natur.216.1276M|s2cid=4193218}}</ref>
<ref name="Barton-2002">{{cite journal | last1 = Barton | first1 = Cathy | year = 2002 | title = Marie Tharp, oceanographic cartographer, and her contributions to the revolution in the Earth sciences | bibcode = 2002GSLSP.192..215B | journal = Geological Society, London, Special Publications | volume = 192 | issue = 1| pages = 215–228 | doi = 10.1144/gsl.sp.2002.192.01.11 | s2cid = 131340403}}</ref>
<ref name="Blakemore-2016">Blakemore, Erin (30 August 2016). "Seeing Is Believing: How Marie Tharp Changed Geology Forever". Smithsonian.</ref>
<ref name="Evans-2002">Evans, R. (November 2002). "Plumbing Depths to Reach New Heights". Retrieved 2 June 2008.</ref>
<ref name="Doel-2006">{{cite journal | last1 = Doel | first1 = R.E. | last2 = Levin | first2 = T.J. | last3 = Marker | first3 = M.K. | year = 2006 | title = Extending modern cartography to the ocean depths: military patronage, Cold War priorities, and the Heezen-Tharp mapping project, 1952–1959 | journal = Journal of Historical Geography | volume = 32 | issue = 3| pages = 605–626 | doi = 10.1016/j.jhg.2005.10.011}}</ref>
<ref name="Wills-2016">Wills, Matthew (8 October 2016). "The Mother of Ocean Floor Cartography". JSTOR. Retrieved 14 October 2016. While working with the North Atlantic data, she noted what must have been a rift between high undersea mountains. This suggested earthquake activity, which then [was] only associated with [the] fringe theory of continental drift. Heezen infamously dismissed his assistant's idea as "girl talk." But she was right, and her thinking helped to vindicate Alfred Wegener's 1912 theory of moving continents. Yet Tharp's name isn't on any of the key papers that Heezen and others published about plate tectonics between 1959 and 1963, which brought this once-controversial idea to the mainstream of earth sciences.</ref>
<ref name="NYTimes-2011">{{cite news|date=12 January 2011|title=Jack Oliver, Who Proved Continental Drift, Dies at 87|page=A16|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/12/science/earth/12oliver.html|url-status=live|access-date=6 June 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130526135459/http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/12/science/earth/12oliver.html|archive-date=26 May 2013}}</ref>
<ref name="Isacks-1968">{{cite journal|last1=Isacks|first1=Bryan|last2=Oliver|first2=Jack|last3=Sykes|first3=Lynn R.|date=15 September 1968|title=Seismology and the New Global Tectonics|journal=[[Journal of Geophysical Research]]|volume=73|issue=18|pages=5855–5899|bibcode=1968JGR....73.5855I|doi=10.1029/JB073i018p05855}}</ref>
<ref name="USGS">{{Cite web |url=http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dynamic/continents.html |publisher=United States Geological Survey |title=Rejoined continents [This Dynamic Earth, USGS] |access-date=22 July 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100825180951/http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dynamic/continents.html |archive-date=25 August 2010 |url-status=live}}</ref>
}}

== General and cited sources ==
* {{Cite book |last=Frankel |first=Henry R.|date=2012 |title=The Continental Drift Controversy |volume=I: ''Wegener and the Early Debate'' |publisher=Cambridge |ref=Frankel }}
* {{Cite book |first=Homer Eugene |last=Le Grand |year=1988 |title=Drifting Continents and Shifting Theories |publisher=Cambridge University |isbn=978-0-521-31105-2 |ref=none |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/driftingcontinen00legr }}
* {{Cite book |first=Naomi |last=Oreskes |author-link=Naomi Oreskes |year=1999 |title=The Rejection of Continental Drift |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn= 978-0-19-511732-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EEQdk9GRfkoC&pg=PA14 |ref=none}} (pb: {{ISBNT | 0-19-511733-6 }})
* {{Cite encyclopedia |first1=Naomi |last1=Oreskes |title=Continental Drift |url=http://historyweb.ucsd.edu/oreskes/Papers/Continentaldrift2002.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120204234030/http://historyweb.ucsd.edu/oreskes/Papers/Continentaldrift2002.pdf |editor1-first=Ted |editor1-last=Munn |editor2-first=Michael C. |editor2-last=MacCracken |editor3-first=John S. |editor3-last=Perry |date=2002 |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of Global Environmental Change |volume=1 |pages=321–325 |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |place=Chichester, West Sussex |isbn=978-0-471-97796-4 |oclc=633880622 |archive-date=4 February 2012 }} <!-- CAUTION: catalogs are inconsistent. This is from the printed book. -->
* {{Cite book |first=Abraham |last=Ortelius |year=1596 |orig-year=1570 |title=Thesaurus Geographicus |place=Antwerp |publisher=Plantin |language=la |edition=3 |oclc=214324616}} (First edition published 1570, [https://books.google.com/books?id=YG1EAAAAcAAJ&pg=PR4 1587 edition online])
* {{Cite book |last=Şengör |first=Celâl|author-link=Celâl Şengör |date=1982|chapter=Classical theories of orogenesis|editor-last=Miyashiro|editor-first=Akiho|editor-link=Akiho Miyashiro|editor-last2=Aki|editor-first2=Keiiti|editor-last3=Şengör|editor-first3=Celâl |title=Orogeny |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |isbn=978-0-471-103769|ref=Sengor1982}}
* {{Cite book |first=Antonio |last=Snider-Pellegrini |year=1858 |title=La Création et ses mystères dévoilés |publisher=Frank and Dentu |place=Paris |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UZdKmF3iEdUC&pg=PA314-IA3}}.

== External links ==
{{Library resources box}}
{{Wikibooks|Historical Geology|Continental drift}}
* [http://www.age-of-the-sage.org/tectonic_plates/boundaries_boundary_types.html#franklin_emerson_continental_drift Benjamin Franklin (1782) and Ralph Waldo Emerson (1834) noted Continental Drift]
* [http://www.ux1.eiu.edu/~cfjps/1300/cont_drift.html A brief introduction to Plate Tectonics, based on the work of Alfred Wegener]
* [https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/06/science/tectonic-plates-continental-drift.html Animation of continental drift for last 1 billion years]
* [http://www.scotese.com/earth.htm Maps of continental drift, from the Precambrian to the future]
* [https://dinosaurpictures.org/ancient-earth 3D visualization of what did Earth look like from  750 million years ago to present (at present location of your choice)]

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Continental Drift theory}}
[[Category:Obsolete geology theories]]
[[Category:Plate tectonics]]

Latest revision as of 20:05, 24 November 2024

Continental drift is the theory, originating in the early 20th century, that Earth's continents move or drift relative to each other over geologic time.[1] The theory of continental drift has since been validated and incorporated into the science of plate tectonics, which studies the movement of the continents as they ride on plates of the Earth's lithosphere.[2]

The speculation that continents might have "drifted" was first put forward by Abraham Ortelius in 1596. A pioneer of the modern view of mobilism was the Austrian geologist Otto Ampferer.[3][4] The concept was independently and more fully developed by Alfred Wegener in his 1915 publication, "The Origin of Continents and Oceans".[5] However, at that time his hypothesis was rejected by many for lack of any motive mechanism. In 1931, the English geologist Arthur Holmes proposed mantle convection for that mechanism.

History

[edit]

Early history

[edit]
Abraham Ortelius by Peter Paul Rubens, 1633

Abraham Ortelius (Ortelius 1596),[6] Theodor Christoph Lilienthal (1756),[7] Alexander von Humboldt (1801 and 1845),[7] Antonio Snider-Pellegrini (Snider-Pellegrini 1858), and others had noted earlier that the shapes of continents on opposite sides of the Atlantic Ocean (most notably, Africa and South America) seem to fit together.[8] W. J. Kious described Ortelius's thoughts in this way:[9]

Abraham Ortelius in his work Thesaurus Geographicus ... suggested that the Americas were "torn away from Europe and Africa ... by earthquakes and floods" and went on to say: "The vestiges of the rupture reveal themselves if someone brings forward a map of the world and considers carefully the coasts of the three [continents]."

In 1889, Alfred Russel Wallace remarked, "It was formerly a very general belief, even amongst geologists, that the great features of the earth's surface, no less than the smaller ones, were subject to continual mutations, and that during the course of known geological time the continents and great oceans had, again and again, changed places with each other."[10] He quotes Charles Lyell as saying, "Continents, therefore, although permanent for whole geological epochs, shift their positions entirely in the course of ages."[11] and claims that the first to throw doubt on this was James Dwight Dana in 1849.

Antonio Snider-Pellegrini's Illustration of the closed and opened Atlantic Ocean (1858)[12]

In his Manual of Geology (1863), Dana wrote, "The continents and oceans had their general outline or form defined in earliest time. This has been proved with regard to North America from the position and distribution of the first beds of the Lower Silurian, – those of the Potsdam epoch. The facts indicate that the continent of North America had its surface near tide-level, part above and part below it (p.196); and this will probably be proved to be the condition in Primordial time of the other continents also. And, if the outlines of the continents were marked out, it follows that the outlines of the oceans were no less so".[13] Dana was enormously influential in America—his Manual of Mineralogy is still in print in revised form—and the theory became known as the Permanence theory.[14]

This appeared to be confirmed by the exploration of the deep sea beds conducted by the Challenger expedition, 1872–1876, which showed that contrary to expectation, land debris brought down by rivers to the ocean is deposited comparatively close to the shore on what is now known as the continental shelf. This suggested that the oceans were a permanent feature of the Earth's surface, rather than them having "changed places" with the continents.[10]

Eduard Suess had proposed a supercontinent Gondwana in 1885[15] and the Tethys Ocean in 1893,[16] assuming a land-bridge between the present continents submerged in the form of a geosyncline, and John Perry had written an 1895 paper proposing that the Earth's interior was fluid, and disagreeing with Lord Kelvin on the age of the Earth.[17]

Wegener and his predecessors

[edit]
Alfred Wegener

Apart from the earlier speculations mentioned above, the idea that the American continents had once formed a single landmass with Eurasia and Africa was postulated by several scientists before Alfred Wegener's 1912 paper.[5] Although Wegener's theory was formed independently and was more complete than those of his predecessors, Wegener later credited a number of past authors with similar ideas:[18][19] Franklin Coxworthy (between 1848 and 1890),[20] Roberto Mantovani (between 1889 and 1909), William Henry Pickering (1907)[21] and Frank Bursley Taylor (1908).[22]

The similarity of southern continent geological formations had led Roberto Mantovani to conjecture in 1889 and 1909 that all the continents had once been joined into a supercontinent; Wegener noted the similarity of Mantovani's and his own maps of the former positions of the southern continents. In Mantovani's conjecture, this continent broke due to volcanic activity caused by thermal expansion, and the new continents drifted away from each other because of further expansion of the rip-zones, where the oceans now lie. This led Mantovani to propose a now-discredited Expanding Earth theory.[23][24][25]

Continental drift without expansion was proposed by Frank Bursley Taylor,[26] who suggested in 1908 (published in 1910) that the continents were moved into their present positions by a process of "continental creep",[27][28] later proposing a mechanism of increased tidal forces during the Cretaceous dragging the crust towards the equator. He was the first to realize that one of the effects of continental motion would be the formation of mountains, attributing the formation of the Himalayas to the collision between the Indian subcontinent with Asia.[29] Wegener said that of all those theories, Taylor's had the most similarities to his own. For a time in the mid-20th century, the theory of continental drift was referred to as the "Taylor-Wegener hypothesis".[26][29][30][31]

Alfred Wegener first presented his hypothesis to the German Geological Society on 6 January 1912.[5] He proposed that the continents had once formed a single landmass, called Pangaea, before breaking apart and drifting to their present locations.[32]

Wegener was the first to use the phrase "continental drift" (1912, 1915)[5][18] (German: "die Verschiebung der Kontinente") and to publish the hypothesis that the continents had somehow "drifted" apart. Although he presented much evidence for continental drift, he was unable to provide a convincing explanation for the physical processes which might have caused this drift. He suggested that the continents had been pulled apart by the centrifugal pseudoforce (Polflucht) of the Earth's rotation or by a small component of astronomical precession, but calculations showed that the force was not sufficient.[33] The Polflucht hypothesis was also studied by Paul Sophus Epstein in 1920 and found to be implausible.

Rejection of Wegener's theory, 1910s–1950s

[edit]

Although now accepted, and even with a minority of scientific proponents over the decades, the theory of continental drift was largely rejected for many years, with evidence in its favor considered insufficient. One problem was that a plausible driving force was missing.[1] A second problem was that Wegener's estimate of the speed of continental motion, 250 cm/year (100 in/year), was implausibly high.[34] (The currently accepted rate for the separation of the Americas from Europe and Africa is about 2.5 cm/year (1 in/year).)[35] Furthermore, Wegener was treated less seriously because he was not a geologist. Even today, the details of the forces propelling the plates are poorly understood.[1]

The English geologist Arthur Holmes championed the theory of continental drift at a time when it was deeply unfashionable. He proposed in 1931 that the Earth's mantle contained convection cells which dissipated heat produced by radioactive decay and moved the crust at the surface.[36] His Principles of Physical Geology, ending with a chapter on continental drift, was published in 1944.[37]

Geological maps of the time showed huge land bridges spanning the Atlantic and Indian oceans to account for the similarities of fauna and flora and the divisions of the Asian continent in the Permian period, but failing to account for glaciation in India, Australia and South Africa.[38]

The fixists

[edit]

Hans Stille and Leopold Kober opposed the idea of continental drift and worked on a "fixist"[39] geosyncline model with Earth contraction playing a key role in the formation of orogens.[40][41] Other geologists who opposed continental drift were Bailey Willis, Charles Schuchert, Rollin Chamberlin, Walther Bucher and Walther Penck.[42][43] In 1939 an international geological conference was held in Frankfurt.[44] This conference came to be dominated by the fixists, especially as those geologists specializing in tectonics were all fixists except Willem van der Gracht.[44] Criticism of continental drift and mobilism was abundant at the conference not only from tectonicists but also from sedimentological (Nölke), paleontological (Nölke), mechanical (Lehmann) and oceanographic (Troll, Wüst) perspectives.[44][45] Hans Cloos, the organizer of the conference, was also a fixist[44] who together with Troll held the view that excepting the Pacific Ocean continents were not radically different from oceans in their behaviour.[45] The mobilist theory of Émile Argand for the Alpine orogeny was criticized by Kurt Leuchs.[44] The few drifters and mobilists at the conference appealed to biogeography (Kirsch, Wittmann), paleoclimatology (Wegener, K), paleontology (Gerth) and geodetic measurements (Wegener, K).[46] F. Bernauer correctly equated Reykjanes in south-west Iceland with the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, arguing with this that the floor of the Atlantic Ocean was undergoing extension just like Reykjanes. Bernauer thought this extension had drifted the continents only 100–200 km (60–120 mi) apart, the approximate width of the volcanic zone in Iceland.[47]

David Attenborough, who attended university in the second half of the 1940s, recounted an incident illustrating its lack of acceptance then: "I once asked one of my lecturers why he was not talking to us about continental drift and I was told, sneeringly, that if I could prove there was a force that could move continents, then he might think about it. The idea was moonshine, I was informed."[48]

As late as 1953—just five years before Carey[49] introduced the theory of plate tectonics—the theory of continental drift was rejected by the physicist Scheidegger on the following grounds.[50]

  • First, it had been shown that floating masses on a rotating geoid would collect at the equator, and stay there. This would explain one, but only one, mountain building episode between any pair of continents; it failed to account for earlier orogenic episodes.
  • Second, masses floating freely in a fluid substratum, like icebergs in the ocean, should be in isostatic equilibrium (in which the forces of gravity and buoyancy are in balance). But gravitational measurements showed that many areas are not in isostatic equilibrium.
  • Third, there was the problem of why some parts of the Earth's surface (crust) should have solidified while other parts were still fluid. Various attempts to explain this foundered on other difficulties.

Road to acceptance

[edit]

From the 1930s to the late 1950s, works by Vening-Meinesz, Holmes, Umbgrove, and numerous others outlined concepts that were close or nearly identical to modern plate tectonics theory. In particular, the English geologist Arthur Holmes proposed in 1920 that plate junctions might lie beneath the sea, and in 1928 that convection currents within the mantle might be the driving force.[51] Holmes's views were particularly influential: in his bestselling textbook, Principles of Physical Geology, he included a chapter on continental drift, proposing that Earth's mantle contained convection cells which dissipated radioactive heat and moved the crust at the surface.[52][53] Holmes's proposal resolved the phase disequilibrium objection (the underlying fluid was kept from solidifying by radioactive heating from the core). However, scientific communication in the 1930s and 1940s was inhibited by World War II, and the theory still required work to avoid foundering on the orogeny and isostasy objections. Worse, the most viable forms of the theory predicted the existence of convection cell boundaries reaching deep into the Earth, that had yet to be observed.[citation needed]

In 1947, a team of scientists led by Maurice Ewing confirmed the existence of a rise in the central Atlantic Ocean, and found that the floor of the seabed beneath the sediments was chemically and physically different from continental crust.[54][55] As oceanographers continued to bathymeter the ocean basins, a system of mid-oceanic ridges was detected. An important conclusion was that along this system, new ocean floor was being created, which led to the concept of the "Great Global Rift".[56]

Meanwhile, scientists began recognizing odd magnetic variations across the ocean floor using devices developed during World War II to detect submarines.[57] Over the next decade, it became increasingly clear that the magnetization patterns were not anomalies, as had been originally supposed. In a series of papers published between 1959 and 1963, Heezen, Dietz, Hess, Mason, Vine, Matthews, and Morley collectively realized that the magnetization of the ocean floor formed extensive, zebra-like patterns: one stripe would exhibit normal polarity and the adjoining stripes reversed polarity.[58][59][60] The best explanation was the "conveyor belt" or Vine–Matthews–Morley hypothesis. New magma from deep within the Earth rises easily through these weak zones and eventually erupts along the crest of the ridges to create new oceanic crust. The new crust is magnetized by the Earth's magnetic field, which undergoes occasional reversals. Formation of new crust then displaces the magnetized crust apart, akin to a conveyor belt – hence the name.[61]

Without workable alternatives to explain the stripes, geophysicists were forced to conclude that Holmes had been right: ocean rifts were sites of perpetual orogeny at the boundaries of convection cells.[62][63] By 1967, barely two decades after discovery of the mid-oceanic rifts, and a decade after discovery of the striping, plate tectonics had become axiomatic to modern geophysics.

In addition, Marie Tharp, in collaboration with Bruce Heezen, who was initially sceptical of Tharp's observations that her maps confirmed continental drift theory, provided essential corroboration, using her skills in cartography and seismographic data, to confirm the theory.[64][65][66][67][68]

Modern evidence

[edit]

Geophysicist Jack Oliver is credited with providing seismologic evidence supporting plate tectonics which encompassed and superseded continental drift with the article "Seismology and the New Global Tectonics", published in 1968, using data collected from seismologic stations, including those he set up in the South Pacific.[69][70] The modern theory of plate tectonics, refining Wegener, explains that there are two kinds of crust of different composition: continental crust and oceanic crust, both floating above a much deeper "plastic" mantle. Continental crust is inherently lighter. Oceanic crust is created at spreading centers, and this, along with subduction, drives the system of plates in a chaotic manner, resulting in continuous orogeny and areas of isostatic imbalance.

Mesosaurus skeleton, MacGregor, 1908
Fossil patterns across continents (Gondwanaland)

Evidence for the movement of continents on tectonic plates is now extensive. Similar plant and animal fossils are found around the shores of different continents, suggesting that they were once joined. The fossils of Mesosaurus, a freshwater reptile rather like a small crocodile, found both in Brazil and South Africa, are one example; another is the discovery of fossils of the land reptile Lystrosaurus in rocks of the same age at locations in Africa, India, and Antarctica.[71] There is also living evidence, with the same animals being found on two continents. Some earthworm families (such as Ocnerodrilidae, Acanthodrilidae, Octochaetidae) are found in South America and Africa.

The complementary arrangement of the facing sides of South America and Africa is an obvious and temporary coincidence. In millions of years, slab pull, ridge-push, and other forces of tectonophysics will further separate and rotate those two continents. It was that temporary feature that inspired Wegener to study what he defined as continental drift although he did not live to see his hypothesis generally accepted.

The widespread distribution of Permo-Carboniferous glacial sediments in South America, Africa, Madagascar, Arabia, India, Antarctica and Australia was one of the major pieces of evidence for the theory of continental drift. The continuity of glaciers, inferred from oriented glacial striations and deposits called tillites, suggested the existence of the supercontinent of Gondwana, which became a central element of the concept of continental drift. Striations indicated glacial flow away from the equator and toward the poles, based on continents' current positions and orientations, and supported the idea that the southern continents had previously been in dramatically different locations that were contiguous with one another.[18]

See also

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Historical perspective [This Dynamic Earth, USGS]". United States Geological Survey. Archived from the original on 27 July 2018. Retrieved 29 January 2008.
  2. ^ Oreskes 2002, p. 324.
  3. ^ Kalliope Verbund: Ampferer, Otto (1875–1947) 
  4. ^ Helmut W. Flügel: Die virtuelle Welt des Otto Ampferer und die Realität seiner Zeit. In: Geo. Alp., Vol. 1, 2004.
  5. ^ a b c d Wegener, Alfred (6 January 1912), "Die Herausbildung der Grossformen der Erdrinde (Kontinente und Ozeane), auf geophysikalischer Grundlage" (PDF), Petermanns Geographische Mitteilungen, 63: 185–195, 253–256, 305–309, archived from the original (PDF) on 4 October 2011.
  6. ^ Romm, James (3 February 1994), "A New Forerunner for Continental Drift", Nature, 367 (6462): 407–408, Bibcode:1994Natur.367..407R, doi:10.1038/367407a0, S2CID 4281585.
  7. ^ a b Schmeling, Harro (2004). "Geodynamik" (PDF) (in German). University of Frankfurt.
  8. ^ Brusatte, Stephen, Continents Adrift and Sea-Floors Spreading: The Revolution of Plate Tectonics (PDF), archived (PDF) from the original on 3 March 2016, retrieved 16 May 2016
  9. ^ Kious, W. J.; Tilling, R. I. (February 2001) [1996], "Historical perspective", This Dynamic Earth: the Story of Plate Tectonics (Online ed.), United States Geological Survey, ISBN 978-0-16-048220-5, archived from the original on 8 April 2011, retrieved 29 January 2008
  10. ^ a b Wallace, Alfred Russel (1889), "12", Darwinism …, Macmillan, p. 341
  11. ^ Lyell, Charles (1872), Principles of Geology ... (11 ed.), John Murray, p. 258, archived from the original on 6 April 2016, retrieved 16 February 2015
  12. ^ Antonio Snider-Pellegrini, La Création et ses mystères dévoilés (Creation and its mysteries revealed) (Paris, France: Frank et Dentu, 1858), plates 9 and 10 Archived 5 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine (between pages 314 and 315).
  13. ^ Dana, James D. (1863), Manual of Geology, Theodore Bliss & Co, Philadelphia, p. 732, archived from the original on 15 May 2015, retrieved 16 February 2015
  14. ^ Oreskes 2002
  15. ^ Eduard Suess, Das Antlitz der Erde (The Face of the Earth), vol. 1 (Leipzig, (Germany): G. Freytag, 1885), page 768. From p. 768: "Wir nennen es Gondwána-Land, nach der gemeinsamen alten Gondwána-Flora, ... " (We name it Gondwána-Land, after the common ancient flora of Gondwána ... )
  16. ^ Edward Suess (March 1893) "Are ocean depths permanent?" Archived 5 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine, Natural Science: A Monthly Review of Scientific Progress (London), 2 : 180- 187. From page 183: "This ocean we designate by the name "Tethys", after the sister and consort of Oceanus. The latest successor of the Tethyan Sea is the present Mediterranean."
  17. ^ Perry, John (1895) "On the age of the earth", Nature, 51 : 224–227 Archived 17 February 2015 at archive.today, 341–342, 582–585.
  18. ^ a b c Wegener, A. (1966) [1929], The Origin of Continents and Oceans, Courier Dover Publications, ISBN 978-0-486-61708-4
  19. ^ Wegener, A. (1929), Die Entstehung der Kontinente und Ozeane (4 ed.), Braunschweig: Friedrich Vieweg & Sohn Akt. Ges.
  20. ^ Coxworthy, Franklin (1924). Electrical Condition; Or, How and where Our Earth was Created. J.S. Phillips. Retrieved 6 December 2014.
  21. ^ Pickering, W.H (1907), "The Place of Origin of the Moon – The Volcani Problems", Popular Astronomy, 15: 274–287, Bibcode:1907PA.....15..274P
  22. ^ Frank Bursley Taylor (3 June 1910) "Bearing of the Tertiary mountain belt on the origin of the earth's plan", Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, 21 : 179–226.
  23. ^ Mantovani, R. (1889), "Les fractures de l'écorce terrestre et la théorie de Laplace", Bull. Soc. Sc. Et Arts Réunion: 41–53
  24. ^ Mantovani, R. (1909), "L'Antarctide", Je M'instruis. La Science Pour Tous, 38: 595–597
  25. ^ Scalera, G. (2003), "Roberto Mantovani an Italian defender of the continental drift and planetary expansion", in Scalera, G.; Jacob, K.-H. (eds.), Why expanding Earth? – A book in honour of O.C. Hilgenberg, Rome: National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology, pp. 71–74, hdl:2122/2017
  26. ^ a b Lane, A. C. (1944), "Frank Bursley Taylor (1860–1938)", Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 75 (6): 176–178, JSTOR 20023483
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