The end of the "Mesozoic Era" coincides with the abupt disappearance of almost all large animal life on the Earth, about 65 million years ago. Luis Alvarez determined that a number of interesting factors including a layer of "shocked quartz" and iridium dust that occurred at about the same time, and this led to his hypothesis that a large object had impacted the Earth causing the extinction.
Craters and the position of the planet.
There certainly is enough material in the asteroid belt to form another planet, however the immense gravity of Jupiter prevented a planet from forming.
A lack of evidence would weaken any theory. But the well known asteroids have well defined orbits.
An asteroid(s) impacted with Mercury many times in it's early formation.
No. Scientists have discovered fossil evidence that mightindicate that there were, at one time long ago, bacteria on Mars. However, the evidence is sketchy; not all scientists agree that the fossils are in fact evidence of life.
fossils
No not yet
there is evidence that it did but they're is also evidence that it did not
Science doesn't really work like that; but there is good evidence that a major asteroid impact happened shortly before the mass extinction of the dinosaurs. To complicate the story slightly, the dinosaurs had been declining before the asteroid hit - so it may be the asteroid may have speeded an existing process. There is also good evidence that modern birds are descended from dinosaurs.
Meteorites that originate from the asteroid belt can collide with Earth, carrying evidence of Earth's inner composition. By analyzing these meteorites, scientists can study the interior structure and composition of our planet.
i know that this is stupid but how do scientists get empirical evidence.
mass extinction events throughout history. These craters provide evidence of the catastrophic effects of asteroid or comet impacts on the Earth's surface, leading to significant environmental changes and extinction events. Scientists study these craters to better understand the impact events and their potential implications for future planetary protection.
As far as we know there is not a asteroid headed for mars. but there might be actually, there's no evidence to prove the answer.
Craters and the position of the planet.
They relied more on evidence.
the scientists had empirical evidence waiting to be answered
Scientists found evidence in Rodinia in Antartica.