Actually, that conclusion presupposes that there was a Gondwanaland in the first place.Fossil Mantle Plume Under South America"The conduit appears to have remained geographically fixed with respect to the overlying continent despite thousands of kilometers of South American plate motion. This observation runs contrary to a major tenet of plate tectonic theory -- that the motion of lithospheric plates is essentially independent of flow in the upper mantle beneath the plates -- and implies that the upper mantle and the overlying South American continent have remained coupled since the breakup of the Gondwanaland super-continent and opening of the South Atlantic Ocean some 120 million years ago.
by William Corliss
But What About The Hawaiian Volcanic Chain?P.D. Ihinger is challenging the well-entrenched "Hawaiian-volcanic-chain" theory. For example, the Hawaiian volcanoes do not line up exactly. There are dozens of short, overlapping segments rather than a continuous trace across the Pacific basin. On the map, you will also see a sharp dog-leg in the trace. Further, the volcanoes Mauna Loa and Mauna Kea, only 40 kilometers apart, disgorge lavas that are distinctly different.
by William Corliss
Researchers Suggest Answer to Geological PuzzleSMU geologists Rebecca Ghent and Douglas Oliver studied the location of the major hot spots and determined that a disproportionate number occur at latitudes between 20 and 30 degrees north and south of the equator. Their observation became much more significant when the hot spots were weighted according to the amount of volcanic material that they produced. Statistical analysis shows that the likelihood of this distribution arising by chance is less than one percent... Oliver and Ghent said their observation may shed light on other geological phenomena, such as the development of superplumes, which are clusters of mantle plumes arriving together at the Earth's surface. Scientists believe that massive superplume events are responsible for some of the major changes that have occurred on the Earth, such as the breakup of the supercontinent known as Pangea into the present continents.
National Science Foundation
The Earth Is Expanding And We Don't Know Why"The geological and geophysical implications of such Earth expansion are so profound that most geologists and geophysicists shy away from them. In order to fit with the reconstruction that seems to be required, the volume of the Earth was only 51 per cent of its present value, and the surface area 64 per cent of that of the present day, 200 million years ago. Established theory says that the Earth's interior is stable, an inner core of nickel iron surrounded by an outer layer that behaves like a fluid. Perhaps we are completely wrong and the inner core is in some state nobody has yet imagined, a state that is undergoing a transition from a high-density state to a lower density state, and pushing out the crust, the skin of the Earth, as it expands."
by William R. Corliss
Science Frontiers #37
Jan-Feb 1985
(Owen, Hugh; "The Earth Is Expanding and We Don't Know Why, "New Scientist, p. 27, November 22, 1984.)