Yes. Meteor showers are annual and planet-wide, and not limited to a particular continent or locality.
No, not a meteor shower. The dinosaurs became extinct after a meteor struck the earth which blocked out the sun and killed much of the vegetataion that the dinosaurs used for food.
As far as we know, no rogue planet has ever come near Earth. Comets and asteroids have come near Earth, but not actual planets.
No. If you're wondering about the asteroid belt, there was never a planet there in the first place; Jupiter's gravity kept one from ever forming. Meteors, properly speaking, couldn't destroy a planet anyway.
1 Mercury day is 59 Earth days
Scientists do not believe that any planet ever crashed into Venus.
nope .
Biblical view: The great flood wiped clean the earth of all life, save everything that was in Noah's ark. Evolutionist's view: A giant meteor crashed into the planet, wiping out the majority of life on this planet. Also, massive volcanic activity may have contributed. Decide for yourself which you think is true, but remember, there is a lot of evidence that large meteors and comets have struck and will continue to strike the Earth, but there is no evidence that the entire planet was ever completely covered with water.
Yes. Meteor showers are annual and planet-wide, and not limited to a particular continent or locality.
No, not a meteor shower. The dinosaurs became extinct after a meteor struck the earth which blocked out the sun and killed much of the vegetataion that the dinosaurs used for food.
Probably about 4.6 billion years ago.
Yes. Some comets die spectacular deaths, like Shoemaker-Levy 9, which crashed into Jupiter. Some just break up and continue in their orbits. We often find "meteor showers" when the orbit of the Earth intersects the orbit of a comet.
As far as we know, no rogue planet has ever come near Earth. Comets and asteroids have come near Earth, but not actual planets.
The Moon and Earth
its not the biggest planet in the world it is almost average.
has air jamaica ever crashed before
No. If you're wondering about the asteroid belt, there was never a planet there in the first place; Jupiter's gravity kept one from ever forming. Meteors, properly speaking, couldn't destroy a planet anyway.