Gondwana
For other uses of Gondwana and Gondwanaland, see
Gondwana (disambiguation). The southern
supercontinent Gondwana (, originally Gondwanaland) included most of the landmasses in today's
southern hemisphere, including
Antarctica,
South America,
Africa,
Madagascar,
Australia-New Guinea, and
New Zealand, as well as
Arabia and the
Indian subcontinent, which are in the
Northern Hemisphere. The name is derived from the
Gondwana region of central northern
India (from Sanskrit gondavana "forest of
Gond").
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Gondwanaland
Noun
1. a hypothetical continent that (according to plate tectonic theory) broke up later into India and Australia and Africa and South America and Antarctica
(hypernym) continent
(part-holonym) southern hemisphere