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  1. Rodinia - Wikipedia

    Rodinia was surrounded by the superocean Mirovia. According to J.D.A. Piper, Rodinia is one of two models for the configuration and history of the continental crust in the latter part of Precambrian times.

  2. Rodinia | Formation, Breakup, & Facts | Britannica

    Rodinia, in geologic time, a supercontinent that incorporated almost all the landmasses on Earth for about 450 million years during the Proterozoic Eon (2.5 billion to 541 million years ago).

  3. Rodinia: Origin, evolution, and secrets of one of the first supercontinents

    Jul 21, 2025 · Discover how Rodinia was formed, its characteristics, and the geological impact of this supercontinent.

  4. The Supercontinent Rodinia - Archania

    Rodinia was an ancient supercontinent – a single vast landmass that included nearly all of Earth’s continental crust. It formed in the late Precambrian, roughly 1.2–1.0 billion years ago, and persisted …

  5. Earth Supercontinents: Rodinia, Gondwana, Pangea - Geology In

    Rodinia, displaying a vast supercontinent where modern continents like Laurentia, Baltica, and Australia are fused together, enveloped by the ancient Mirovia Ocean.

  6. Rodinia - GPlates

    Rodinia (from 'rodit', meaning 'to beget' or 'to give birth' in Russian) was a supercontinent that existed during the Neoproterozoic and was named as it was thought to have been the original supercontinent …

  7. What Is the Rodinia Supercontinent? - thedailyECO

    Sep 15, 2025 · Rodinia was a supercontinent that existed during the Neoproterozoic era, somewhere between 500 million and 1.3 billion years ago. The breakup of Rodinia formed the fragments that …

  8. Rodinia - Wikiwand

    Rodinia was a Mesoproterozoic and Neoproterozoic supercontinent that assembled 1.26–0.90 billion years ago (Ga) and broke up 750–633 million years ago (Ma).

  9. Columbia, Rodinia and Pangaea: A history of Earth's supercontinents

    Jan 13, 2024 · Rodinia was the second supercontinent to form in the Precambrian period, coming together around a billion years ago and breaking up around 700 million years ago. Researchers don't …

  10. Breakup of Rodinia | Springer Nature Link (formerly SpringerLink)

    Geochronology of Neoproterozoic syn-rift magmatism in the Yangtze Craton, South China and correlations with other continents: evidence for a mantle superplume that broke up Rodinia.