the sizes of the sun and the moon
Tides
According to the ICS timescale, time divisions are as follows: Age (1 million years, 1000 Millennia). Epoch (10 million years, 10 Ages). Era (100 million years, 10 Epochs). Eon (500 million years, 5 Eras. But, the ICS timescale does not use lustrum, decades, centuries or millennia. Calendar subdivisions use them and according to it, nothing follows millennium. Anything longer than 1 millennium is just referred to as Millennia (Plural form of Millennium).
The continents will be very very far apart. Longer than 100 million years the continents might join together again like pangea. The earth will be very bumpy and jagged shaped in the time period of 50 million years from now. The continents will no longer be this close as they are. There will be much more erosion and mountains with glaciers. The earth will not be much pleasant with all the rough sights but the earth will always continue to move and one day the earth will be as it was more than imaginable million years from now.
in ten million years the earth probably wont be here. in ten million years the earth probably wont be here. in ten million years the earth probably wont be here. in ten million years the earth probably wont be here. in ten million years the earth probably wont be here. in ten million years the earth probably wont be here. in ten million years the earth probably wont be here. in ten million years the earth probably wont be here.
160,000 million million.
Tides
10 million years ago they were formed, 5 million years ago, the earth's plates moved to make the mountains higher
Dinosaurs - about 150 million years. Humans - about 1 million years.
Tides
Dinosaurs existed from 231 million years ago to 65.5 million years ago, a time span of 166 million years. Humans as a genus have only been around for 2.3 million years, and modern humans for only 200,000 years. So dinosaurs existed for a much longer time than we have so far.
Yes, but for longer than 255 million years. The earliest amphibians evolved in the Devonian Period about 370 million years ago.
The Northwest :)
No 2 years is longer, I think
well it took about 103 years by the construction and athorites
10 million years
Pangea began to drift apart about 200 million years ago. Pangea split into two smaller continents: Gondwana and Laurasia. These continents lasted from about 200 million years ago to 100 million years ago.
[70] million years old