LILKI means Less Important Little-Known Info. The continents moved apart rapidly in just over a day’s time. Mike Fischer figured it out in the early 1990s and built a website to explain it, which he’s been updating ever since. This is the main video explanation of his finding:
Mike dates the event at over 10,000 years ago, about 500 years after the Great Flood, but I accept the Septuagint Bible date of the Flood of about 3,300 BC and I think the Breakup of Pangaea occurred toward the end of the Great Flood at that time. The Flood only lasted 6 months or so.
Mike’s website has many pages for more thorough explanations. The site is http://newgeology.us/
Corporate Science dates the breakup at millions of years ago, but I explain at cataclysmicearthhistory.substack.com/p/1 why that dating is way wrong.
If the Noah’s Ark story is largely accurate, for which there is some physical evidence, i.e. drop stones etc leading up to Mt. Ararat, then the reason the asteroid impact wasn’t mentioned may be because it was not noticed, due to darkness from volcanic dust and impact dust etc in the atmosphere. I suppose the Ark must have been of Flood waters over Turkey or near there when the asteroid impacted. The impact was about 3,000 miles south near Tanzania, so it would have been fairly far beyond the horizon from Turkey. The impact caused the continents to move apart and mountains to be raised up, so the Flood waters over the mountains of Ararat would have raised up too and then would have drained off soon. I guess it’s likely that the Ark started out within just a few hundred miles of where it ended up. There were dangerous animals, mainly dinosaurs, in most parts of Pangaea, but maybe the area around Turkey was free of the most dangerous ones. The drop stones that hung down in the water from all sides of the Ark have been shown on a video to have been able to keep the Ark from capsizing during tidal waves etc.
Imagine living during the Flood, building the Ark in advance, living on the Ark for 6 months during heavy rains, meteor impacts, volcanic eruptions, land rifting, sediment deposition and mountain formation, and then getting off of the Ark and finding that everyone else is gone and all the dinosaurs are wiped out and just the Ark land animals are all that remain and the land is completely different with very little vegetation.