Do you remember the fireball that lit up the Long Island sky in the 1960's? It was on the cover of Newsday and WINS reported it. Why not start in the archives of Newsday and WINS? Let me know what you find.
That would be Lamborghini .That would be Lamborghini .
The Hayden Planetarium in Manhattan has a very nice one that you can go and see if you wish. If you would like to find one that nobody else has found yet, I can't really predict where a meteor will fall, since they can fall anywhere.
It would depend on the moves, but I would say no as the typing is unbalanced (2 steels). Alakazam: Flamethrower, Ice Beam, Thunderbolt, Psychic Scizor: Meteor Mash, Extreme Speed, Sword Dance, Silver Wind Metagross: Meteor Mash, Explosion, Cross Chop, Earthquake
There are plenty of famous meteors, to know which one specifically you are speaking about, I would need a name. The most famous is probably the one that many believe killed all the dinosaurs. This meteor is estimated to be about 6 miles wide, and created a crater about 110 miles across. Many believe that the Chicxulub Crater in Yucatan, Mexico is this meteor.
duty or morality
Long Island
More than I would have imagined. Below I have listed a site just for angel sightings.
well the meteor would be sucked in by the earths gravitational pull
The lightning would travel through the meteor or through the plasma sheath around it. Some of the surface of the meteor may melt, though this will happen to a meteor anyway. Otherwise the meteor would be unaffected. The stress of atmospheric entry is much greater than any stress created by the lightning.
A. The US government would have no reason to do that, since... B. If there were UFO sightings with abductions, they would not be under the government's control.
It wouldn't land. When a meteor lands it is now called a meteorite
The meteor would pass through the tornado, without being affected in the least.
No. Meteorologists study weather. An astronomer would predict meteor showers.
You would find a meteorite in a museum. A meteoroid is in space, a meteor is in the atmosphere, and a meteorite is in the ground.
Nome, Alaska seems to have been a hotbed of UFO activity. Crashes, sightings, craft found in ice, ect. Who would have known.
In theory you can, yes. It would be an insanely costly project to build up more than 270 m of foundation for an island and just having an island would certainly not justify the expenses. Nevertheless, with enough effort it is doable, provided you manage to get the funding and you get around the lawsuits and protests of the environmentalists that want to protect the endemic species.
Life as we know it would disappear. It's not possible for a meteor to punch a clean hole through the Earth. So a meteor big enough would crack the Earth into pieces. These might eventually be pulled together again by gravity, but the planet would be unrecognizable.