Did a comet or asteroid or large meteor hit the Earth about 12900 years ago? It seems to be true; there were species extinctions about that time that seem to be related to an impact event. There is a special class of rocks called "tektites", which are only found near the sites of nuclear explosions or meteor impacts. The dust of tektites has been found all over North America, in the same layers of rocks that have the dead animals like the wooly mammoth and saber-toothed tigers.
There was also a mini-ice age about that time, called the "Younger Dryas". Some scientists believe (and this is still a fairly controversial theory!) that a small asteroid or a comet struck northern Canada and may have melted enough glacier ice to cause a cold water flood into the Atlantic, which could have triggered the Younger Dryas. (Other scientists looking at the same evidence aren't so sure - or rather, are QUITE sure that it did NOT happen that way.)
A "HUGE" comet? Not so much. A really big comet or asteroid would have caused much MORE damage. The asteroid that was believed to have killed off the dinosaurs was only about 6 miles in diameter, and killed off 75% of all life on Earth. The one that hit Canada must have been much smaller. Some scientists believe that there may have been several smaller objects striking many places across North America.
There is scientific evidence to support the hypothesis of a comet or asteroid impact in North America around 12,900 years ago, known as the Younger Dryas Impact Event. However, the direct connection between the impact and widespread wildfires is uncertain. Wildfires can have multiple causes and are influenced by various factors, so it's challenging to attribute them solely to the impact event. Further research is still being conducted to understand the extent of the impact and its effects on climate and ecosystems.
Comet Shoemaker-Levy Collided with Jupiter in July 1994.
"Periodic" comets reappear at predictable intervals, such as Haley's Comet. Some comets are never seen again. A few crash into the Sun and are destroyed; a few crash into other planets, such as the Shoemaker-Levy comet that hit Jupiter. Many comets have such long periods, in terms of thousands of years, that no records exist that anyone ever saw them before.
Jupiter in 1994 it took an entire week for the 21 pieces to crash into Jupiter
... i bet a nigeran scammer sent u that= scam lol
Halley's comet - which returns to our solar system approximately every 75 years - is one example, named after it's discoverer Edmund Halley. Another notable example is Shoemaker-Levy 9. It was observed orbiting the planet Jupiter, but the orbit was decaying - leading to the prediction that it was to crash into Jupiter's surface.
Comet Crash was created on 2009-04-02.
It may, or it may not. There is no particular reason to assume that a comet will crash into Earth precisely in 2012.
No. But NASA did send a space probe to crash into a comet.
A Comet is a body in perpetual orbit. A Meteorite is a body which enters the Earth's atmosphere. It is unlikely that Halley's Comet will ever crash into the Earth.
Comet Crash - 2009 VG was released on: USA: 2 April 2009
Comet Shoemaker-Levy Collided with Jupiter in July 1994.
no
There is no reason why there should be ANY bad effects in such a case - unless the comet happens to crash on Earth.
Nobody knows for certain if a gigantic comet will crash into the Earth or not. However, such an event is very rare and unlikely to happen in the near future.
red cars crash the most because the brightness of the reflects with the light witch causes them to crash
"Periodic" comets reappear at predictable intervals, such as Haley's Comet. Some comets are never seen again. A few crash into the Sun and are destroyed; a few crash into other planets, such as the Shoemaker-Levy comet that hit Jupiter. Many comets have such long periods, in terms of thousands of years, that no records exist that anyone ever saw them before.
Jupiter in 1994 it took an entire week for the 21 pieces to crash into Jupiter