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Since the definition of continent is arbitrary, the definition of supercontinent is also arbitrary (as is the definition of a subcontinent), but the term refers to a landmass containing more than one of the modern continents.
Present day supercontinents are Eurasia, Africa-Eurasia, and The Americas.
Most commonly, the term supercontinent is used to refer to a landmass consisting of all the modern continents. It was originally believed that a single supercontinent, Pangæa, had existed for a very long period of Earth's history. However more modern studies have shown that supercontinents form in cycles, coming together and breaking apart again, through continental drift, about every 250 million years.
Supercontinents block the flow of heat from the Earth's interior, and thus cause the asthenosphere to overheat. Eventually, the lithosphere will begin to dome upward and crack, magma will then rise, and the fragments will be pushed apart. It is currently a matter of some debate as to how the supercontinents reform, whether or not continental drift makes them re-join after travelling around the planet, or if they drift apart and then back together.
The supercontinent Rodinia broke up roughly 750 million years ago. One of the fragments included large parts of the modern southern hemisphere continents. Continental drift then brought the fragments together in a different configuration, resulting in another supercontinent, Pangæa, forming in the late Paleozoic. Pangæa broke up into the northern and southern supercontinents, LaurasiaLaurasia was a supercontinent that broke off from the Pangaean supercontinent in the late Mesozoic era. Laurasia divided into Eurasia and North America around 200 million years ago. The southern supercontinent created is called Gondwana. See also Alfred W and GondwanaThis article is about the ancient supercontinent of Gondwana. For the region of India called Gondwana, see Gondwana (India). The southern supercontinent Gondwana (originally Gondwanaland included most of the landmasses which make up today's continents of.
Recently Drs. Rogers and Santosh have proposed the existence of a yet older supercontinent, ColumbiaColumbia (or Hudsonland is the name of the supercontinent which existed approximately 1. 5 billion years ago in the Paleoproterozoic era. It probably consisted of Laurentia, Baltica, Ukraine, Amazonia, Australia, and possibly Siberia, North China and Kala, that was formed and broken up during a period of 1.8 to 1.5 billionThe word billion , and its equivalents in other languages, refer to one of two different numbers. The obsolete word "milliard" can be used for 109 to avoid ambiguity, though this usage is unfamilar to some speakers of English. See long scale for a more de years (1.8-1.5 Ga) ago.