Where was YOUR home at the time of the dinosaurs? Check out this map

The Daily Mail

Where was YOUR home at the time of the dinosaurs? Check out this map

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Let's be honest, we've all wondered it. Obviously Britain wasn't Britain when dinosaurs walked the Earth, but where exactly was your home at the time of T.Rex, Stegosaurus and Diplodocus? Well, an interactive map lets you travel back in time to find out. 'Ancient Earth Globe' reveals how the continents have split and reformed while oceans advanced and receded across 750 million years of our planet's history. It also features a range of tools that make it easy to discover more about the Earth, such as where the first reptiles lived or when the first flower bloomed. The map was built using research from Northern Arizona University and reveals that humans are 'just a blip in history', according to Ian Webster, the former engineer behind it. You do this by entering your location into the map, which then plugs it into plate tectonic models and allows users to Eustreptospondylus was a carnivore that lived during the Jurassic period in what is now England. Another dinosaur species, Neovenator, lived in what is now the UK and France. Summaries of each period reveal what was happening at different stages, such as the Early Cambrian period 540 million years ago. Also of particular interest is the formation of Pangea around 280 million years ago, when all of Earth's landmass were clustered as a single super continent that was surrounded by one ocean, Panthalassa. The East Coast of the United States would have bordered North Africa while America's Gulf Coast was nestled against Cuba. Mr Webster told MailOnline he created the interactive map as a handy educational tool for younger generations. 'I decided to make this map because I think ancient history and geology is fascinating,' the software engineer added. 'It can be difficult to conceptualise what Earth used to look like. Putting this knowledge in a format we're all used to - an interactive globe - goes a long way toward creating an educational tool for geological history.' Webster built the map as a web application that sits on top of another map which visualises geological models created by geologist and paleogeographer Christopher Scotese. Those models describe plate tectonic development dating back to 750 million years ago, which is around the time green algae first evolved in the Earth's oceans. You can also search what our planet looked like when it got its first shells, coral reefs, vertebrates, land plants and animals, insects and reptiles. On top of that, you can jump to the first grass, first hominids, when the Pannotia and Pangea supercontinents existed, and when the dinosaurs went extinct. Linked to the website is The Dinosaur Database, which is packed with facts and figures about the ancient and fearsome creatures that used to walk the Earth.