<span>I'm not sure I
completely understand what the question is asking for. When I look at
the plates, it looks like they all fit together like a giant puzzle.
They separated due to tectonic plates shifting over hundreds of years.
This was based on the theory that there was a supercontinent (one giant
landmass). I'm not sure how much this helps, but I hope it does. Good
luck!!
</span>
At 3.6 million square miles (9.4 million square kilometers), the Sahara, which is Arabic for "The Great Desert," engulfs most of North Africa. The desert covers large sections of Algeria, Chad, Egypt, Libya, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Western Sahara desert.hope this helps!!!
A. appeasement
that should do it
If you look at the "memory" of the rocks being created and moving away from each other at the mid-Atlantic ridge, you can see where the magnetic poles flipped from north to south and back again.
<span>Looking at the rocks each side of the ridge shows that they are magnetic mirror images of each other and therefore that the surface of the Earth (at this point) is moving away from the ridge.</span>