Yes, meteorites have collided with Earth in the past, leaving impact craters. One notable example is the Chicxulub crater in Mexico, believed to have been caused by a meteorite impact that led to the extinction of the dinosaurs.
There is abundant evidence that Flight 93 crashed into a reclaimed strip mine, leaving a crater located approximately at 40°03'02" N longitude, 78°45'22" W latitude in Shanksville, PA. The evidence consists of numerous eyewitness reports
The Mars satellite that crashed on Mars was the Mars Climate Orbiter. It crashed in 1999 due to a navigational error caused by a mix-up of imperial and metric unit systems during the spacecraft's mission.
Asteroids typically take thousands to millions of years to reach the Earth from the asteroid belt. Once in the Earth's vicinity, an asteroid can crash into the Earth at any time depending on its trajectory and other factors.
NASA isn't exactly sure. The satellite had failed, so it was difficult to track. But they're sort-of confident that it fell into the north Pacific ocean.
Meteorites crashed into all of the planets.
Depends, if i crashed into you, you can but if you crashed into me you cant, if we both crashed into each other, i guess you can with evidence.
The impact craters on the moon's surface are obvious clues to the fact that meteorites have crashed into our natural satellite. that tell us that the moon doesn't have oxygen because if it have oxygen the meteorites would burn
Nortel
Water + Snow + Canadian Cold
Canadian Wilderness
Scientists do not believe that any planet ever crashed into Venus.
from when an objects crashed into earth and an chunk of rock form
He was in the middle of the Canadian Wilderness, if that's what you're talking about..
That is never stated in the first book, but it may be in others.
The Yukon. Watch the movie (A Cry in the Wild).
There is only one recorded case of it happening, in Alabama in the 1950's. It crashed through the roof of a home, and it bounced off the woman's radio console before hitting her (she was slightly injured). It was about the size of a football.