Earth Science 7 - Gantgea

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Earth Science 7-Global Regions


Gantgea

Pangaea.JPG.jpeg

[1]

Countries(in this case continents)

You name it, I've got it.

Latitude and Longitude

Latitude Range 90 degrees N to 75 degrees S

Longitude Range 90 degrees W to 20 degrees E (at the equator)[2],

Elevation Range

Elevation Range While the exact elevations of the highest and lowest points were difficult to determine, this interactive site will allow one to see the general topography of Gantgea. [3],

http://www.scotese.com/Pangea2d.htm

Large Bodies of Water Panthalassa Ocean and Tethys Sea

Topographic Features

Major Topoggraphic Features

  • Mountains - Ancestral Rockies, Appalachian, Hercynian , and Ural System
  • The interior of what is now North America was mostly plains such as the Interior Lowland Plateaus, the Central Lowland, the Great Plains, the Manitoba Lowlands, the Prairie Grassland, the Northern Boreal Plains, the Mackenzie Delta and the Southern Boreal Plains and Plateau.

[4],

http://www.scotese.com/paleocli.htm

Climate Zones

Gantgea has many climates due it it's size and location on the planet. It has ET (Polar Tundra), Dfc (snow, humid, cool summer), Bwk (arid, winter dry, cool arid, Cfa (warm temperate, fully humid, hot summer). [5]

Factors that affect the climate of Gantgea:

Gantgea is completely surrounded by an ocean, Panthalassa, and stretches from the North pole almost to the South pole. For this reason we are able to find a wide range of climates on Gantgea. A portion of the north and south, is covered by glaciers. The Ancestral Rockies runs from N to S along the west coast of what is now N. America. This mountain chain causes a rain shadow on the eastern side causing the Interior Plains to be a BWk climate region. Other areas are swampy (Cfa). Coastal areas are strongly influenced by ocean currents causing the north west coastal area (Cfb) to be cooler than the north east (Dfa). Conditions are reversed in the southern hemisphere. [6],



http://geology.com/pangea.htm


  1. (Pangaea.PNG).
  2. [1].
  3. [2].
  4. [3].
  5. [4].
  6. http://geography.about.com/library/weekly/aa011700b.htm