The glossopteris was a seed fern that was shaped like a tongue. The glossopteris became extinct about 252 million years ago, at the end of the Permian era.
because they can only swim in freshwater not salt water and between Africa and south America is the Atlantic ocean and so the Atlantic ocean is too salty for them to swim in so they would die and not make it across...r u from westfield??
glossopteris
Glossopteris is a plant fossil that was found in multiple continents that were once part of the supercontinent Gondwana. The widespread distribution of Glossopteris across these continents suggests that they were once connected, providing evidence for the existence of Gondwana.
it said to be a plant animal XD
Glossopteris
The presence of the fossil fern Glossopteris supported Wegener's hypothesis of continental drift. Glossopteris fossils were found on multiple continents that are now widely separated, indicating that these landmasses were once connected and later drifted apart.
It was found in Africa, Australia, India, South America, and Antarctica. All of these regions once were connected and had similar climates. And all of these landforms have a similar section of when they were connected
Glossopteris plants lived during the Permian and Carboniferous periods, approximately 360 to 250 million years ago. These plants were dominant in the southern hemisphere when the continents were connected as part of the supercontinent Gondwana.
Glossopteris is important because it is a genus of extinct seed fern that played a significant role in the theory of continental drift. Fossils of glossopteris plants have been found on multiple continents, providing evidence to support the idea that these landmasses were once connected as part of the supercontinent Gondwana.
plant fossils (glossopteris) were found there.
Antarctica would not support glossopteris growth today because it has a polar climate with cold temperatures and limited sunlight, which are not conducive to the growth of glossopteris trees that thrived in warm, temperate climates millions of years ago.