Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cimmerian_Plate> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 91 of
91
with 100 triples per page.
- Cimmerian_Plate abstract "The Cimmerian Plate is an ancient tectonic plate that comprises parts of present-day Anatolia, Iran, Afghanistan, Tibet, Indochina and Malaya regions.The Cimmerian Plate was formerly part of the ancient supercontinent of Pangaea. Pangaea was shaped like a vast \"C\", facing east, and inside of the \"C\" was the Paleo-Tethys Ocean. Two microcontinents, which are part of present-day China, lay in the eastern expanse of the Paleo-Tethys Ocean. About 300 Ma (million years ago), a rift started opening from the east which split a long, thin arc off of the inside of the southern arm of the continent, which comprised present-day Australia, Antarctica, India, and Africa-Arabia. This micro-continent has been named Cimmeria. Behind this new micro-continent the rift formed a new ocean, the Tethys Ocean. As the Tethys Ocean widened, it pushed Cimmeria and the floor of the Paleo-Tethys Ocean northward towards Laurasia, the northeastern arm of Pangaea.As it moved north, the floor of the Paleo-Tethys subducted under Laurasia and Cimmeria eventually collided with Laurasia, first at its western end c. 220 Ma, and Paleo-Tethys began to disappear altogether, closing from west to east. The collision of the continents raised mountains along the suture, called the Cimmerian orogeny. On its eastern end, Cimmeria collided with the Chinese micro-continents c. 200 Ma, and the Cimmerian orogeny was extended along the entire northern boundary of the plate. Most of Paleo-Tethys disappeared by c. 150 Ma. More mountains were raised as the northern edge of the China plates collided with eastern Laurasia. After it collided with Laurasia around 200 Ma (Early Jurassic), the Tethyan Trench formed on southern Cimmeria, subducting the Tethys Ocean which created island arcs and new mountain ranges in the area.The Tethys rift eventually extended westward to split Pangaea in two, and the growing Atlantic Ocean separated the northern supercontinent of Laurasia from the southern supercontinent Gondwana. Around 150 Ma Gondwana also began to rift apart, and the continents of India and Africa-Arabia began to drift north towards Laurasia, of which Cimmeria now formed the southern coast. Africa-Arabia and India eventually collided with Asia c. 30 Ma, reuniting Cimmeria with its former Gondwanian neighbors and buckling and folding the former Cimmerian continent to form the Alps, Caucasus, Zagros Mountains, Hindu Kush, the Pamir Mountains, the Sulaiman Mountains, the Iranian plateau, the Himalayas, the Tibetan Plateau, and the Burmese highlands. This mountain-forming process is called the Alpine orogeny.".
- Cimmerian_Plate thumbnail 290_global.png?width=300.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageExternalLink www.scotese.com.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageExternalLink jurassic.htm.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageExternalLink newpage5.htm.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageID "1039391".
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageLength "4118".
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageOutDegree "55".
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageRevisionID "697006548".
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Afghanistan.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Africa.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Alpine_orogeny.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Alps.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Anatolia.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Antarctica.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Arabian_Peninsula.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Atlantic_Ocean.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Australia.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Category:Historical_geology.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Category:Historical_tectonic_plates.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mesozoic_geology.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Category:Natural_history_of_Asia.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Category:Permian_geology.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tectonic_plates.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Caucasus.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink China.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Cimmeria_(continent).
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Cimmerian_Orogeny.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Continental_fragment.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Early_Jurassic.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Geography_of_Myanmar.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Geology_of_the_Himalaya.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Himalayas.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Hindu_Kush.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink India.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Indochina.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Iran.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Iranian_Plateau.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Island_arc.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Laurasia.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Malay_Peninsula.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Mountain_range.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Paleo-Tethys_Ocean.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Pamir_Mountains.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Pangaea.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Pangaea_Ultima.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Permian.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Plate_tectonics.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Rift.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Subduction.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Sulaiman_Mountains.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Supercontinent.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Supercontinent_cycle.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Tethyan_Trench.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Tethys_Ocean.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Tibet.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Tibetan_Plateau.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Triassic.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Year.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink Zagros_Mountains.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink File:100_global.png.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink File:249_global.png.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLink File:290_global.png.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLinkText "Cimmeria".
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageWikiLinkText "Cimmerian Plate".
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Geology_of_Europe.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Tectonic_plates.
- Cimmerian_Plate wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- Cimmerian_Plate subject Category:Historical_geology.
- Cimmerian_Plate subject Category:Historical_tectonic_plates.
- Cimmerian_Plate subject Category:Mesozoic_geology.
- Cimmerian_Plate subject Category:Natural_history_of_Asia.
- Cimmerian_Plate subject Category:Permian_geology.
- Cimmerian_Plate subject Category:Tectonic_plates.
- Cimmerian_Plate hypernym Plate.
- Cimmerian_Plate type AnatomicalStructure.
- Cimmerian_Plate type Plate.
- Cimmerian_Plate type Redirect.
- Cimmerian_Plate comment "The Cimmerian Plate is an ancient tectonic plate that comprises parts of present-day Anatolia, Iran, Afghanistan, Tibet, Indochina and Malaya regions.The Cimmerian Plate was formerly part of the ancient supercontinent of Pangaea. Pangaea was shaped like a vast \"C\", facing east, and inside of the \"C\" was the Paleo-Tethys Ocean. Two microcontinents, which are part of present-day China, lay in the eastern expanse of the Paleo-Tethys Ocean.".
- Cimmerian_Plate label "Cimmerian Plate".
- Cimmerian_Plate sameAs Q5120147.
- Cimmerian_Plate sameAs Plaque_cimmérienne.
- Cimmerian_Plate sameAs Kimmériai_lemez.
- Cimmerian_Plate sameAs m.040n1m.
- Cimmerian_Plate sameAs Киммерийская_плита.
- Cimmerian_Plate sameAs Кіммерійська_плита.
- Cimmerian_Plate sameAs Mảng_Cimmeria.
- Cimmerian_Plate sameAs Q5120147.
- Cimmerian_Plate wasDerivedFrom Cimmerian_Plate?oldid=697006548.
- Cimmerian_Plate depiction 290_global.png.
- Cimmerian_Plate isPrimaryTopicOf Cimmerian_Plate.