What supercontinent are you affiliated with?? 😤😤
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What supercontinent are you affiliated with?? 😤😤

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Is there any way to have a large landmass around the equator without having a desert? Is it possible to have a map that stretches from the North Pole to the South, and have green fertile countries around the equator? And if it is possible, what kind of land, sea, or mountain shape/sizes would be required? I want to create a “paradise” planet where everything is at least somewhat green and lush, polar deserts are still acceptable, but I don’t know how realistic it is.
Hey there! Sorry for taking a bit to answer this one!
I’m guessing that this is in reference to my video about brickworlds and supercontinents, where the general implication was that supercontinents were not nice places to live. The thing is that there are a lot of factors that feed into climate, and as a rule supercontinents have rolled pretty badly on every single one of them. The main factors which affect the climate of an area are latitude, elevation, and its distance from large bodies of water; supercontinents are usually at equatorial latitudes, have high elevations, and their central areas are a long distance from bodies of water.
Of course none of this says that you can’t have a supercontinent with a pleasant climate, but you need to either keep those main factors in mind, or come up with some other reasons why the climate is stable. My suggestion would be having a world which is somewhat more tectonically active than Earth, with a fair number volcanoes on the supercontinent and a correspondingly large number of lakes and inland seas. This also has the benefit of giving most of the continent fertile tropical and semi-tropical soil conditions, thanks to volcanic ash and greenhouse gas emissions. Shape-wise, maybe start by thinking somewhat like Seanchan from The Wheel of Time, but make the rift lines less aggressively linear.
Of course, it’s possible that adding a whole bunch of volcanoes would make your planet a bit less Arcadian than you would prefer. Culturally, you could look into the people of Hawai’i and the Philippines and how they deal with volcanoes – but a lot of their comfort comes from modern seismological early warning systems. If you wanted a fantasy world equivalent, there could be some sort of geologically inclined oracles who help to plan evacuations?
Anyway, that’s about the best I can get from this question; hopefully it’s been helpful! If you come up with more ideas that help narrow this down, then feel free to send me another ask!
The Amazonian Craton: Rodinia’s prodigal son
I saw this out of context and it made me laugh
Not enough supercontinents in fantasy
righteous & responsive by supercontinents live at the Green Lantern for the Jefferson St. Soireé. Lexington, KY. 12 September 2018.

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As the world has adapted and changed so to has its geographical make-up. Scientists theorise that the world began with a single land mass known as “Columbia” or “Nuna” which would later split into larger islands called “Rodinia” before reforming as a larger land mass called “Pannotia” which eventually split to form “Pangea” (as pictured above) these large land masses are called “Supercontinents”. Over time Pangea would split into the land masses known as “Laurasia” and “Gondwana” which would eventually split further into the seven continents which make up our modern world. This is due to earthquakes, volcanic activity and the shifting of the earths techtonic plates which force land masses to clash, merge and divide. This in turn may signify a growing of the earths mass as its internal core is fed through a sub-space wormhole forcing it to widen and splitting the continents further apart. In the future more land masses will emerge and submerge from the oceans, split apart or merge together. Scientists can tell that the continents used to be one land mass by the way that each continent seems to fit together like pieces of a puzzle. Pangea had one superocean called “Panthalassa” and with the development of fish came much larger predatory precursors to sharks and other large marine predators.
(via Continents Drift Order | Geography Learning Game)