About: Rodinia   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/ZUwxRiv2ZfRlAZ6jr2T9hg==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Forest island in the middle of a small lake in the Dreglar Marsh.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Rodinia
rdfs:comment
  • Forest island in the middle of a small lake in the Dreglar Marsh.
  • Rodinia was a planet in wild space or unknown regions. After 120 BBY, the planet was ravaged, in which all the inhabitants had to leave.
  • In geology, Rodinia (from the Russian родина, "rodina", meaning "motherland") is the name of a supercontinent, a continent which contained most or all of Earth's landmass. According to plate tectonic reconstructions, Rodinia existed between 1100 and 750 million years ago, in the Neoproterozoic era. The extreme cooling of the global climate around 700 million years ago (the so called snowball Earths of the Cryogenian period) and the rapid evolution of primitive life during the subsequent Ediacaran and Cambrian periods are often thought to have been triggered by the breaking up of Rodinia.
sameAs
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:fossil/prop...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:swfanon/pro...iPageUsesTemplate
Name
  • Rodinia
dbkwik:rpgarena/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
Terrain
  • Forest island
Native
  • Land Khanjadans
World
immigrated
  • Humans
abstract
  • In geology, Rodinia (from the Russian родина, "rodina", meaning "motherland") is the name of a supercontinent, a continent which contained most or all of Earth's landmass. According to plate tectonic reconstructions, Rodinia existed between 1100 and 750 million years ago, in the Neoproterozoic era. In contrast with Pangaea, the last supercontinent about 300 million years ago, little is known yet about the exact configuration and geodynamic history of Rodinia. Paleomagnetic evidence provides some clues to the paleolatitude of individual pieces of the Earth's crust, but not to their longitude, which geologists have pieced together by comparing similar geologic features, often now widely dispersed. The extreme cooling of the global climate around 700 million years ago (the so called snowball Earths of the Cryogenian period) and the rapid evolution of primitive life during the subsequent Ediacaran and Cambrian periods are often thought to have been triggered by the breaking up of Rodinia. Image:Mantell's Iguanodon restoration.jpg This article is a . You can help My English Wiki by expanding it.
  • Forest island in the middle of a small lake in the Dreglar Marsh.
  • Rodinia was a planet in wild space or unknown regions. After 120 BBY, the planet was ravaged, in which all the inhabitants had to leave.
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