Asked by caleb
What happened to the continents during the Cenozoic?
They moved closer together.
They formed two supercontinents.
They formed one supercontinent.
They moved to their current locations.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
They moved to their current locations.
Explanation: By the start of the Cenozoic (66 Ma) Pangaea had already broken up; during the Cenozoic the continents continued to drift into the positions we see today (India colliding with Asia, uplift of the Himalayas and Alps, northward movement of Australia, widening of the Atlantic, etc.).
Explanation: By the start of the Cenozoic (66 Ma) Pangaea had already broken up; during the Cenozoic the continents continued to drift into the positions we see today (India colliding with Asia, uplift of the Himalayas and Alps, northward movement of Australia, widening of the Atlantic, etc.).
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