Laurasia
[ law-rey-zhuh, -shuh ]
/ lɔˈreɪ ʒə, -ʃə /
noun Geology.
a hypothetical landmass in the Northern Hemisphere near the end of the Paleozoic Era: split apart to form North America and Eurasia.
Compare
Gondwana.
Origin of Laurasia
1930–35; blend of
Laurentian(def 2) and
Eurasia
British Dictionary definitions for laurasia
Laurasia
/ (lɔːˈreɪʃə) /
noun
one of the two ancient supercontinents produced by the first split of the even larger supercontinent Pangaea about 200 million years ago, comprising what are now North America, Greenland, Europe, and Asia (excluding India)
See also Gondwanaland, Pangaea
Word Origin for Laurasia
C20: from New Latin
Laur (
entia) (referring to the ancient N American landmass, from
Laurentian strata of the Canadian Shield) + (
Eur)
asia
Scientific definitions for laurasia
Laurasia
[ lô-rā′zhə ]
A supercontinent of the Northern Hemisphere made up of the landmasses that currently correspond to North America, Greenland, Europe, and Asia (except India). According to the theory of plate tectonics, Laurasia separated from Pangaea at the end of the Paleozoic Era and broke up into the current continents in the middle of the Mesozoic Era. Compare Gondwanaland.