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Planets have different masses, and a chunk of gold weighs 1 N depending on its mass and where it is. Other than that it's difficult to be specific.
An asteroid-sized chunk of rock with a tail would be a comet.
Fail ice floe is another possibility.
I think the unanimus answer is that when the earth collided with another planet(putting it on a tilt) a chunk broke off and got caught in the earths magnetic pull. There are no other theories i know of.
the earth does not make dirt the earth is part of a star that blew up billions of years ago and all of the sediment from that star chunk is now dirt!
They are creatures from another planet that warred with on another continually, when their spirits arrived on a chunk of their planet, they began wreaking war on the living.
Before life existed on Earth a Mars like object collided with our planet. A big chunk of the Earth floated away from our planet due to the pressure of the collision. And that big chunk is now what we call, the Moon.
Halite, a colorless chunk that breaks apart into cubes and has no luster and is soft enough to be scratched fluorite, and when it gets wet it starts to dissolve. Did that help you?
No, our moon, Luna, was made from our planet, when and asteroid blew a chunk off.
That is when a large chunk of it separates and becomes another, smaller, iceberg.
Craters are where a chunk of space debris, such as a meteor or comet, has struck the surface of the planet and has caused material from the planets (or moons) surface to be ejected outwards.
Planets have different masses, and a chunk of gold weighs 1 N depending on its mass and where it is. Other than that it's difficult to be specific.
An asteroid-sized chunk of rock with a tail would be a comet.
I think the unanimus answer is that when the earth collided with another planet(putting it on a tilt) a chunk broke off and got caught in the earths magnetic pull. There are no other theories i know of.
Fail ice floe is another possibility.
A Meteoroid if the chunk is boulder sized or smaller, or just another Asteroid if it is house-sized or bigger.
A Meteoroid if the chunk is boulder sized or smaller, or just another Asteroid if it is house-sized or bigger.