I suppose there are more meteorites that become extinct than stars.
Meteorites burn up in the atmosphere every night. Not only on this planet, but planets all around the universe.
Some survive but get destroyed when crash-landing into a planet.
A lot of meteorites also get sucked into stars.
no, some rhinos have become extinct, like the Vietnamese java rhino.........and also dinosaurs have become extinct, by the meteorites
Any species will become extinct in time, including humans.
Like all dinosaurs, we still do not know how this prehistoric animal became extinct. it evolved though, because it lived in the Jurassic period of the mesosoic, and did not become extinct, but it evolved
Like all dinosaurs, we still do not know how this prehistoric animal became extinct. it evolved though, because it lived in the Jurassic period of the mesosoic, and did not become extinct, but it evolved
survive
The mesosaurus become extinct about 300 million years ago. This was a type of reptile that looked like a lizard and was the first reptile to go back to aquatic environments.
Just like any other animal you cannot set a date for dolphins to become extinct.
Shooting stars are not stars. They are bits of dirt and dust that burn up in our atmosphere, briefly making them look like stars. Most of that is debris is from comets or others bits of dirt in space, but they are not stars and were not stars. So stars do not become shooting stars.
Snowy owls have not become extinct. They are still a relatively common species of owl, although they face threats like habitat loss and climate change.
The glossopteris was a seed fern that was shaped like a tongue. The glossopteris became extinct about 252 million years ago, at the end of the Permian era.
Yes they will live not die i like pie ice cream
Meteorites fall into two classes, stony and iron. There is a belt of meteoric material near Mars, from which many of our meteorites come. Perhaps the debris from a broken planet? The iron meteorites, in fact iron-nickel mixtures, are magnetic. the stony meteorites are not. Have a look for Bode's Law in a reference source.