
The map above shows the modern remnants of the Central Pangean Mountain Range in Scandinavia, Scotland, Greenland, the United States and Africa.
More about them below:
Map of The Central Pangean Mountains At Equator 285 Million Years Ago

The Central Pangean Mountains were a massive mountain range that existed during the late Paleozoic era, forming as a result of the collision of continental plates that created the supercontinent Pangaea around 300 to 250 million years ago.
This collision was primarily driven by the Alleghanian Orogeny, a tectonic event that involved the convergence of what are now North America, Africa, and parts of Europe.
Key Features:
- Formation and Location:
- These mountains were part of a much larger mountain system that stretched across the heart of Pangaea.
- Their formation was associated with the closure of the Rheic Ocean and the collision of Gondwana (southern continents like Africa and South America) with Laurussia (comprising North America, Europe, and parts of Asia).
- Extent:
- The range likely extended from what is now the Appalachian Mountains in North America through parts of modern Europe, where it may have linked to the Hercynian Mountains, and into regions of northern Africa.
- Evidence of the Central Pangean Mountains is found in fossilized sediments, rocks, and geological features in these areas.
- Erosion and Legacy:
- Over millions of years, the Central Pangean Mountains eroded significantly, leaving behind much smaller remnants, such as:
- The Appalachian Mountains in North America.
- The Anti-Atlas Mountains in Morocco.
- The Hercynian orogenic belts in Europe.
- The sediments eroded from these mountains contributed to the formation of vast coal beds in regions like the Appalachians, which are rich in carbon deposits from the lush tropical forests of the time.
- Over millions of years, the Central Pangean Mountains eroded significantly, leaving behind much smaller remnants, such as:
- Climate and Ecology:
- The towering mountains influenced the climate of Pangaea, creating rain shadows and altering wind patterns.
- During the Carboniferous and Permian periods, the region around these mountains supported dense forests, leading to extensive peat deposits that later turned into coal.
- Tectonic Significance:
- The Central Pangean Mountains provide key evidence for plate tectonics and the processes that formed supercontinents.
- They are often studied alongside other mountain ranges formed by ancient collisions, such as the Himalayas, to understand the long-term geological evolution of Earth’s crust.
Although the mountains themselves have long disappeared due to erosion, their remnants and the geological evidence they left behind are crucial to understanding Earth’s tectonic and environmental history.








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