Jetso wrote:
Continental drift was once considered fringe science. Most geologists at the time didn't think that continents actually moved.
Mom told me that when she was in a classroom in public school back in the Thirties, and got bored with what the teacher was saying, her gaze would often go beyond the teacher to that world map on the wall, and she would often think to herself "if you shoved South America over to the right it looks like it would fit right into Africa". My guess is that generations of school kids have had the same thought. But scientists couldnt imagine a force that could push continents around so yes..it was considered a scientific heresy.
But then came the cold war and with that came advanced submarines and with that ...the need by both superpowers to accurately map the sea floor. Mapping the sea floor they discovered evidence in the rocks of "sea floor spreading". The realizing that new crust wells up and becomes the floor of the sea and that the Atlantic is getting wider from the midatlantic ridge in the middle of the ocean. Continental drift is a byproduct of sea floor spreading because the continents just ride on top of that spreading sea floor crust. So now "Plate Tectonics"(they dont call it 'continental drift anymore' is the new orthodoxy."