Yes. Meteor showers are annual and planet-wide, and not limited to a particular continent or locality.
No, not a meteor shower. The dinosaurs became extinct after a meteor struck the earth which blocked out the sun and killed much of the vegetataion that the dinosaurs used for food.
No. If you're wondering about the asteroid belt, there was never a planet there in the first place; Jupiter's gravity kept one from ever forming. Meteors, properly speaking, couldn't destroy a planet anyway.
Probably not; you'll see more and brighter meteors in a meteor shower between about 2 AM and dawn. The Earth is going around the Sun at about 67,000 miles per hour. The "front" of the Earth is the line of dawn, and the line of sunset is the "back" of the Earth. Look at the bug splats on a car's windshield, and compare those to the bug splats on the BACK window. Lots more on the front, right? The meteors that you see in the evening are the few that were going fast enough to catch up to the Earth from behind. You'll see lots more looking forward, in the pre-dawn sky.
The highest temperature ever recorded in Wichita, Kansas was 114°F (45.6°C) on July 18, 2011.
Yes Halley's comet struck Arizona over 63 million years ago and is believed to have caused the extinction of dinosaurs.
No, not a meteor shower. The dinosaurs became extinct after a meteor struck the earth which blocked out the sun and killed much of the vegetataion that the dinosaurs used for food.
No reason why they could not- they are unrelated events.
Did the Gloucester Meteor and the ME262 ever meet in combat
no
Tunguska Meteor
I have not experienced a death shower.
Yes, have you ever run out of hot water during a shower?
No, I have never encountered a red worm in the shower.
nope, can't say i ever do, but lots of women just pee in the shower -minus the squating!
No, I have not encountered thin red worms in my shower.
No, I have never experienced the unique sensation of a tar shower.
yes just bathe\shower