No.
Life did not start after the dinosaurs were wiped out. Life on Earth started billions of years before that. The asteroid wiped out a large portion of life on earth, but not all of it. Some things survived.
People viewed that the Earth was spinning around the Sun rather than the Sun spinning around the Earth and they questionned the Church.
It is currently believed that the Moon was created as a result of a huge asteroid colliding with Earth. Part of the material getting out of Earth must have coalesced and formed the Moon.
There is no asteroid known to be on the way to hit Earth. If one were to be discovered, then people would start working on a way to try and avoid a catastrophe. But right now, there is no way.
i don't think so.
First you set up the laser beam house, get the nukes ready and than start launching it into space(starts firing at the asteroids). To save or protect the earth you must get ready. Set up all kinds of anti-asteroid weapons and fire at the huge flying rock(asteroid). Shoot lasers at the asteroid from the laser beam house, that will help protect the earth.
Asteroid is one.
Power from waterfalls available cotton the Embargo available labor
No, nuclear weapons do not have the capability to destroy the entire Earth. While they have devastating power and can cause widespread destruction, they are not capable of wiping out the entire planet.
Gravitational forces from moons and planets attract the earth causing it to slowly come near them. Then the sun is also pulling earth thus rotating. It started when the big bang occured. Spinning and collecting at the same time
England with the invention of the spinning machine.
Nobody has the answer to that question. The end of the world, or the cataclysm, is an event that has been prophesied since before written history. Many scenarios have been proposed as to the driving force to cause such a catastrophe, but if geologic history is to be found true, then an asteroid or comet impact may well be the thing that ends the time of humans, and many other creatures, on earth. Some astronomers are watching such celestial objects, and some are predicted to collide with earth in the next 20 or 30 years.