Get updates delivered to you daily. Free and customizable.
The US Sun
Find your home when DINOSAURS roamed Earth with this amazing map that shifts the continents
By Harry Pettit,
2021-08-02
AN ONLINE map shows where your house would have stood hundreds of millions of years ago.
Crafted by California scientist Ian Webster, the interactive tool reveals how far your hometown has moved due to continental drift.
Get all the latest Science news
Keep up-to-date with the top Space & Astronomy stories
All the latest Archaelogy news from dinosaurs to Ancient artefacts
The outer layer of the Earth, the solid crust we walk on, is made up of broken pieces - continents - much like the shell of a broken egg.
Around 240million years ago, the continents were all merged together into one, super-continent called Pangea.
Over time, the pieces of the crust have pulled apart and moved around, eventually forming the seven recognised continents we know today.
To illustrate how Earth's landmasses have changed over time, Webster built the free tool Ancient Earth globe.
It allows you to type in the location of a town or city anywhere in the world and view where it would have stood on prehistoric Earth.
Visitors can pick from a selection of time periods, from the extinction of the dinosaurs 66million years ago right the way back to 750million years ago, when the first green algae bloomed on our planet.
"It shows that our environment is dynamic and can change," Webster, 31, told CNN last year.
"The history of Earth is longer than we can conceive, and the current arrangement of plate tectonics and continents is an accident of time.
"It will be very different in the future, and Earth may outlast us all."
Webster built the site as a web app that sits on top of another map based off of complex geological models.
The tool also utilises GPlates, a software used by geologists to visualize plate tectonic reconstructions over time.
It's meant to provide a quick and easy way to understand the history and science of Earth, according to Webster.
"It is meant to spark fascination and hopefully respect for the scientists that work every day to better understand our world and its past," he said.
"It also contains fun surprises, for example how the US used to be split by a shallow sea, the Appalachains used to be very tall mountains comparable to the Himalayas, and that Florida used to be submerged."
Get updates delivered to you daily. Free and customizable.
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.