[]
Votre Sélection en cours
média(s) Média(s)
Votre devis 0

Votre sélection

Annuler la sélection
{"event":"pageview","page_type1":"undetected","page_type2":"_assets_search_override","language":"fr","user_logged":"false","user_type":"ecommerce","nl_subscriber":"false"}
{"event":"ecommerce_event","event_name":"view_item","event_category":"browse_catalog","ecommerce":{"items":[{"item_id":"PIX4633329","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"earth_200_million_years_ago_artist_s_view_early_jurassic_earth_earth_seen_at_the_beginning_of_the_ju","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4633308","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"the_earth_600_million_years_ago_artist_s_view_ediacaran_earth_the_earth_seen_about_600_million_years","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4633326","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"western_inner_seaway_artist_s_view_the_western_interior_seaway_the_western_interior_seaway_or_north_","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4669572","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"a_ring_of_rocks_and_dust_is_orbiting_the_earth_the_massive_continent_below_is_pangee_and_the_ocean_t","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4633276","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"the_earth_650_million_years_ago_artist_s_view_snowball_earth_the_earth_seen_in_a_period_of_glaciatio","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4633346","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"india_70_million_years_ago_artist_s_view_late_cretaceous_india_india_seen_in_the_upper_cretace_about","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4633324","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"earth_90_million_years_ago_artist_s_view_late_cretaceous_earth_earth_seen_in_the_upper_cretace_about","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4633182","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"l_bret","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"the_earth_about_70_million_years_ago_the_earth_about_70_million_years_ago_artist_view_la_terre_vue_a","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4633235","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"history_of_earth_history_of_earth_schema_illustrating_the_derive_of_continents_on_earth_with_the_sca","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"PIX4633402","item_category":"photo","item_category2":"no_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"walter_b_myers","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"earth_443_million_years_ago_artist_view_silurian_earth_this_is_how_the_earth_may_have_appeared_443_m","item_variant":"undefined"},{"item_id":"BL5943087","item_category":"illustration","item_category2":"out_of_copyright","item_category3":"standard","item_category4":"english_school_20th_century","item_category5":"not_balown","item_list_name":"search_results","item_name":"maps_published_by_a_snider_in_1858_to_illustrate_his_conception_of_continental_drift_from_principles","item_variant":"undefined"}]}}
{"event":"custom_event","event_name":"view_search_result","event_category":"browse_catalog","keyword":"Derive from Continents","search_type":"standard","search_bridgeman_artists":"false","search_mode":"automatic","search_zero_result":"false","search_results":11,"search_results_page_number":1}

'Derive From Continents' images et/ou videos résultats page 1 of 1

Filtres Principaux
Option pour "Acheter un tirage"
Option Libre de Droits
Résultats pour Reuters
Type de média
Orientation
Couleur
Catégorie
Droits
Filtres supplémentaires
Artistes Bridgeman
Photographes Bridgeman
Siècle
Filtres vidéo
Video Original Format
Video Resolution
Video Category
Filter group
Classer par:
par page
Filter group
Catégorie
Type de média
No copyright

Options d'affichage

View
Image Size

11 médias trouvés pour 'Derive From Continents'

Earth 200 million years ago - Artist's view - Early Jurassic Earth - Earth seen at the beginning of the Jurassic, about 200 million years ago. The western hemisphere is representative, the north is up. The Pangee has just split, forming Laurasia to the north and Gondwana to the south. This is how the western hemisphere of the Earth may have appeared 200 million years ago during the Early Jurassic period. North is at the top. During this period continental drift, driven by the massive forces of plate tectonics, had just begun to break the supercontinent of Pangea into Laurasia in the north and Gondwana in the south. In this image the nascent North American continent has just broken away from North Africa while South America and the rest of Africa remain joined as Gondwana. To the west in the global Panthalassa ocean are strips of land corresponding to the Wrangellia Terrane which later merged with western North America
The Earth 600 million years ago - Artist's view - Ediacaran Earth - The Earth seen about 600 million years ago after an important period of glaciation. This is how the Earth may have appeared 600 million years ago following the Cryogenian “” Snowball Earth”” period. The worldwide glaciers have melted and the ocean is largely liquid again. During this, the Ediacaran period, it is hypothesized that all of the Earth's landmasses had merged into a single supercontinent known as Pannotia, also known as the Vendian supercontinent. Surrounding this massive landmass is the vast Panthalassic Ocean, also known as Panthalassa. While the ocean was home to a variety of evolving multicellular life forms including the ubiquitous Dickinsonia costata, it is not believed that life had moved to dry land with possible exception of bacteria and other microbial colonies
Western Inner Seaway - Artist's View - The Western Interior Seaway - The Western Interior Seaway (or North American Inner Sea) seen about 75 million years ago. This sea divided the North American continent into two continents, Laramidia in the west and Appalachia in the east. This is how the Western Interior Seaway may have appeared 75 million years ago from Earth orbit. This large inland sea once divided the North American continent into two landmasses, Laramidia to the west and Appalachia to the east. Branching toward the northeast is the Hudson Seaway and to the north on the horizon are the liquid polar waters of the Labrador Seaway. At less than one - fifth the size of present day North America, the island continent of Laramidia extended from present - day Mexico to Alaska and was home to tyrannosaurs, dromaeosaurids, troodontids, hadrosaurs, ceratopsians, pachycephalosaurs, and titanosaur sauropods. The dinosaurs of Appalachia are less - understood as much of the fossil evidence was destroyed by the glaciers that alternately descended from the north and retreated starting 2.5 million years ago
A ring of rocks and dust is orbiting the Earth. The massive continent below is Pangee and the ocean to the west is Panthalassa. This is what Earth was supposed to look like at the end of Permian, about 260 million years ago, before the first dinosaurs appeared. This ring around the Earth was of earthly origin, constitutes debris thrown into orbit by collision with a meteorite or comet. Over time, these debris have fallen or fallen to Earth in a meteorite rain - A dusty ring arc orbits four thousand miles above Earth's equator. The massive continent below is Pangea and the ocean to the west is Panthalassa. This is how the Earth may have appeared during the end of the Permian period, a time just prior to the appearance of the dinosaurs, when continental drift was pulling Pangea apart into the seven continents we know today - 260 million years ago the Earth may have been host to ring arcs similar to the incomplete rings that currently circumscribe the planet Neptune . Unlike Neptune's rings, the ring arcs around the Earth were of terrestrial origin, debris thrown into orbit by a collision with a large meteorite or comet. The debris consisted of tiny pebbles that were once molten droplets of ejecta, long since cooled in the vacuum of space. The orbit of the ring arc would eventually decay, returning the debris back to Earth as a shower of meteorites. This debris is found on Earth's surface today in the form of dark, glassy objects known as tektites.: La Terre à la fin du Permien - Ring arcs over the Permian Earth
The Earth 650 million years ago - Artist's view - Snowball Earth - The Earth seen in a period of glaciation (Varanger glaciation), about 650 to 630 million years ago. This is how the Earth may have appeared about 650 million years ago during a period when snow and ice may have covered most, if not all, of the Earth's surface and oceans. This image suggests the Earth's appearance during the Marinoan glaciation from 650 to 630 million years ago. The southern and eastern hemispheres are dominated by glacier - covered land masses while the opposing hemisphere is frozen ocean save for a few areas of exposed liquid water, AKA refugia for the Earth's surviving soft - bodied multicellular organisms. In addition to the Marinoan glaciation there may have been at least two, and possibly three previous Proterozoic glacial periods going back to two billion years ago. The causes of these snowball periods are unknown but may have been due to massive volcanic eruptions, massive meteoritic impacts (both resulting in global sun - reflecting ash clouds), or variance's in the Earth's orbit
India 70 million years ago - Artist's view - Late Cretaceous India - India seen in the upper cretace about 70 million years ago. The north is upstairs. To the west, Madagascar separates from India. This is how the Indian subcontinent may have appeared 70 million years ago during the Late Cretaceous period. Looking north, immediately to India's west is the island continent of Madagascar and further west is the eastern coast of southern Africa. In the distant past India and Madagascar formed a single continent, however India was part of a separate tectonic plate that subsequently began to drift northward. This northward motion (covering about 8 inches per year making it among the fastest on the Earth's lithosphere) split India from Madagascar and carried it north across the Tethys Ocean until it collided with Eurasia about 50 to 35 million years ago. This collision between the Indian and Eurasian plates joined India to South Asia and created the Tibetan Plateau and the Himalaya Mountains, a process which is still evolving to this day
Earth 90 million years ago - Artist's view - Late Cretaceous Earth - Earth seen in the upper cretace, about 90 million years ago. This is how the western hemisphere of the Earth may have appeared 90 million years ago during the Late Cretaceous period. During this period continental drift, driven by the massive forces of plate tectonics, had broken the supercontinent of Pangea into Laurasia in the north and Gondwana in the south. With a climate much warmer than today's there were no frozen polar caps and the resulting high ocean levels submerged a third of today's landmasses under warm shallow seas creating numerous waterways and “” island””” continents. In this image much of the incipient North American continent is divided by the Western Interior Seaway, the Isthmus of Panama is submerged by the Proto - Caribbean Sea, and the Pacific Ocean is making an incursion into South America
History of Earth - History of Earth - Schema illustrating the derive of continents on Earth with the scale of geological times. Diagram illustrating plate tectonics with geological time scale
Earth 443 million years ago - Artist View - Silurian Earth - This is how the Earth may have appeared 443 million years ago during the Silurian period. The northern most continent is what would become today's Siberia and to the west of that is the Panthalassic Ocean. South of the equator to the east is the early - Palaeozoic continent of Baltica later to form part of Eurasia, while to the east is the continent of Laurentia later to become the core of North America. Further south is the Rheic Ocean and to the west the Iapetus Ocean
Maps published by A. Snider in 1858 to illustrate his conception of continental drift, from 'Principles of Physical Geology', by Arthur Holmes, 1944 (litho)
Permissions
  • Permission required for non-editorial use (inc book and magazine covers). Please contact us