It is highly unlikely. A million years is a short time on a geologic timescale. Earth will remain habitable for a few hundred million years into the future.
Dinosaurs - about 150 million years. Humans - about 1 million years.
1 million
About 1141 million light-years.
No. Earth cannot explode. Our planet will likely remain intact for about 5 billion years. At that point the sun will expand and probably consume Earth.
Yes, one million years is a significant period in geologic time. It is equivalent to 1/485th of the age of the Earth (4.54 billion years). In the geologic time scale, it falls within the Quaternary period, which includes the most recent 2.6 million years of Earth's history.
1-1.8 million years ago was approximately 0.2-0.8 million years ago.
1 million (1000000)
The distance between the Earth and the sun is not measured in years, but in a unit called Astronomical Units (AU). One AU is approximately 93 million miles or 150 million kilometers. The average distance from the Earth to the sun is about 1 AU.
Earth's oldest known rocks are about 4 billion years old. 4 percent of 4 billion years is 160 million years.
No dinosaurs were living on earth one million years ago, as all dinosaurs are thought to have gone extinct 65,000,000 years ago. However some dinosaurs are thought to have evolved into modern birds and other such creatures
Scientists believe that very early in the history of the Earth, when conditions were vastly different than today, that condensing gases in the early atmosphere led to a rainfall lasting several million years, leading to the formation of the oceans.
I think the answer you are looking for is: 1 Million Years = 1 mellophone