Meteors!
Nothing burns up craters before they hit earth.
Actual collisions are pretty rare. Most 'space debris' burns up in the atmosphere long before it hits the planet.
Meteors!
A meteor.
Once it hits the Earth, we call the pieces "meteorites".
Technically, if it hits the Earth it's not an "asteroid", it's a "meteorite". And yes, meteorites hit the Earth all the time.
It is called a solar eclipse when the Moon's shadow hits Earth, and a lunar eclipse when Earth's shadow hits the Moon.
Because meteoroids hit the moon and when meteoroids come towards Earth our atmosphere burns it away into tiny pieces of rock.
There were no seasons, because no part of the earth was tilted away from it or tilted tword it.
A meteor cannot hit earth: it burns up in the atmosphere. Normally when a meteorite hits earth you do absolutely nothing since you would not even know. Astronomers estimate between 36 and 166 meteorites larger than 10grams fall to Earth per million square kilometres each year. Over the whole surface area of Earth, that translates to 18,000to 84,000meteorites bigger than 10grams per year.
Few comets and meteoroids come from the sky and hit earth. or hail
move quickly before they or someone hits you