No. The Big Bang happened long before Earth or Mars existed. The Big Bang happened about 13.7 billion years ago. All of the matter and energy in the universe was concentrated into a single point. Then all of a sudden it all started to rapidly expand outward. This sudden expansion is called the Big Bang. The Sun and Earth formed about 8 billion years later.
earthquake/fissure
Ultimately the ocean, although depositional environments on land can make this a very long process.Answer: No one can know the ultimate fate of eroded material. It could end up in an ocean and be subducted by plate tectonics and melt, becoming part of the upper mantle or crust, depending on what direction it takes. Eventually, as Earth cools, if it has formed into a sedimentary, metamorphic, or igneous rock, it may stay that way when the planet becomes geologically inactive. Or, billions of years from now, the eroded material may wind up as interstellar dust when the sun expands and consumes Earth in its fiery death. We'll never know.
If there wasn't a boiling hot inner core, then the Earth would implode, or cave in on itself. If there wasn't a mantle, there would be no shield protecting us from Earth's fiery core. And if there wasn't a Crust, then what would you be standing on? Nothing!
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Yes
Douglass, Michael, director. The Fiery Planet. Disney Studios, 2005.
the planet doesn't need a volcano. The core of the earth is a hot fiery furnace. Volcanoes are just mountains with a hole in it to let the boiling fire out. If my answer is not correct don't call 12345678910
SENTENCE: In its primeval state, the earth was a fiery, glowing ball.
Neptune is the coldest of the eight planets, as it's the furthest from the fiery inferno of the sun.
earthquake/fissure
It would be far too expensive. We can't do that because we don't know what kind of effect that would have in space and on any other planet that the trash might land on. Maybe it would rain back down to Earth in a fiery trash Armageddon?
Fiery
No, the Earth's inner core is a solid ball, the outer core a liquid; mostly made of iron and nickel.
Because it's a "star", and therefore a fiery flaming mass of hydrogen gas - unlike some of the planets.
The pressure from the outer core, mantle, and crust sqeeze it to a solid although is is fiery hot.
No. The Big Bang happened long before Earth or Mars existed. The Big Bang happened about 13.7 billion years ago. All of the matter and energy in the universe was concentrated into a single point. Then all of a sudden it all started to rapidly expand outward. This sudden expansion is called the Big Bang. The Sun and Earth formed about 8 billion years later. The collision you are describing is how many planetary geologists believe the moon formed. Earth was hit by a large extra-solar object, and a large blob of matter was scraped off Earth's surface, eventually forming the moon. This event is not called the Big Bang. It doesn't have a widely accepted name, other than the formation of Earth's Moon.
The word 'fiery' is NOT a noun.The word 'fiery' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The word 'fiery' is the adjective form of the noun 'fire'.The word 'fire' is both a noun and a verb.