Gravity pulled together the tiny bits of matter that eventually formed the Earth.
A frozen ball of dust and gas revolving around the sun could describe the planet Pluto. The planet, Pluto, was downgraded to a frozen ball dust and no longer considered to be a planet to scientists and astronomers.
Scientists believed that first the earth was a ball of fire. They believe that the earth formed around this ball of fire, thus meaning the ball of fire is the Earth's core.
The Earth has no rings. There may be a VERY tenuous dust cloud, but that mass would mostly have been skimmed off by the Moon's gravity, causing it to either fall to Earth or ejecting it from near-Earth space. So if there is a dust cloud near the Earth, it is too thin to detect.
Earth's movement through cometry dust is the main reason for meteor showers.
the earth will become in to tiny dust the earth will become in to tiny dust
Big ball of iron with some rock on the outside and a very very thin coating of moisture and oxygen and dangerous creatures.
my sister is a dust ball of ice thats the shittest answer ever
Yes, but it is ill-advised. (You don't want to know what all is in a dust ball.)
Gravity pulled together the tiny bits of matter that eventually formed the Earth.
True tornadoes only form on earth, as far as scientists know. These may become red if they encounter red dust. The planet Mars, had red dust devils. Dust devils resemble tornadoes but they are not actually tornadoes.
comet
Yes, they do. Just this week (January 18, 2010) a meteor crashed through the roof of a doctor's office in Virginia and landed on the floor of the examining room. Granted, MOST meteors burn up in the atmosphere and don't survive the passage. But some do.
No
drops of dust see what i did there ;)
It is estimated that around 40,000 tons of space dust falls on Earth each year. This dust is made up of particles like micrometeoroids and interplanetary dust that enter Earth's atmosphere.
Fullers earth dust (diatomaceous earth) is a natural remedy. There are lots of insecticide powders. where can i find earth dust?