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Quoted: I get all that. But specifically how. I'm wondering about the exact sequence of events. The idea of ash clouding out the sun and polluting the air is pretty straight forward. I'm wondering about the damage to planet itself. What happens to the globe? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Extinction Level Event..............sun blocked out, mass casualties, life dies off............. Well, I'd imagine a huge shockwave would circle the globe and destroy alot of stuff............tsunamis, Earth's crust would probably crack. I could see a large enough one possibly hit with so much force it splits the planet. |
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Erusea throws a fit over having to accept refugees, starting the Continental War and the formation of ISAF.
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Quoted: Huh? View Quote @Star_Scream Sorry 12800 years ago. https://curiosmos.com/global-reset-12800-years-ago-scientists-find-evidence-of-mass-extinction-by-asteroid/ Just search 12800 meteor strike 12800 years ago. Lots of evidence. That russian strike on 1907 https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunguska_event Is part of the same meteor strike from 12800 years ago we go through the belt 2x a year . Pretty cool to watch every fall here. |
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I watched the movie "Don't Look Up" about this very thing.
It's Trumps fault but we get over it. It's the end of the world as we know it. And I feel fine. |
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It depends. As long as it doesn’t punch a hole clear through the earth the people closest to the edges should have time to make it to the other side. Of course this side will be destroyed with no sun and ash everywhere the other side should be relatively pristine. The people who make it there will have to domesticate the dinosaurs so pretty much like the Flinstones.
ETA that’s the beauty of the flat earth. There’s always the other side to go to if this one gets real fucked up. |
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Quoted: The movie got me thinking...what would actually happen? Given some big rock...something maybe as dense as lead...maybe 10 miles across....moving at tens of thousands of MPH...slams right into the Sahara desert. What happens? Does the earth's crust just break? Does the planet get knocked out of its orbit? (and if it does, what happens?) Does all the heat generated by the impact just incinerate the whole planet? I'm genuinely curious. I have a fairly decent grasp of physics, but never really contemplated the result of an impact to the planet like this. View Quote take a guess - you will never see the result so who cares amiright |
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Quoted: @Star_Scream Sorry 12800 years ago. https://curiosmos.com/global-reset-12800-years-ago-scientists-find-evidence-of-mass-extinction-by-asteroid/ Just search 12800 meteor strike 12800 years ago. Lots of evidence. That russian strike on 1907 https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunguska_event Is part of the same meteor strike from 12800 years ago we go through the belt 2x a year . Pretty cool to watch every fall here. View Quote Yeah. Nah brah. The citations are really thin on that and it seems to reference itself. |
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View Quote Thinking about it now, If a big enough asteroid hit the earth. Wouldn't an oxygen sink be created that would suck most of the oxygen out of the atmosphere?. Either way we are fucked. Atmosphere cooking us, or atmosphere getting sucked into space and we all suffocate/freeze to death simultaneously. |
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I'm not ssying we won't get our hair mussed, maybe 4-5 billion dead depending on the breaks..
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The super rich and powerful would run into there super deep luxery shelter and laugh watching video from cameras around the world showing the spectacle of death and destruction. All the time clueless that it is all a fake, a elaborate ruse to get them to just go away.
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That video is a 500 km rock. The one that smokes the dinosaurs was 10 km. Nothing survives a 500. At least at 10 some mammals and sealife lived |
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It's the internet feel free to do your own search but the facts are pointing to it..they have a team of 60 science / geologists doing the study.
Pretty sure it's where the great flood stories are coming from. And where Atlantis went. @Star_Scream |
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Quoted: That video is a 500 km rock. The one that smokes the dinosaurs was 10 km. Nothing survives a 500. At least at 10 some mammals and sealife lived View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: That video is a 500 km rock. The one that smokes the dinosaurs was 10 km. Nothing survives a 500. At least at 10 some mammals and sealife lived Personally, I’d rather be instantly incinerated than live through, “The Road.” |
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As someone pointed out above:
The Chicxulub crater (IPA: [t?ik?u'lub]) is an impact crater buried underneath the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico.[3] Its center is offshore near the communities of Chicxulub Puerto and Chicxulub Pueblo, after which the crater is named.[4] It was formed when a large asteroid, about 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) in diameter, struck the Earth.[5] The date of the impact coincides precisely with the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary (commonly known as the "K–Pg boundary"), slightly more than 66 million years ago,[2] and a widely accepted theory is that worldwide climate disruption from the event was the cause of the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event, a mass extinction in which 75% of plant and animal species on Earth became extinct, including all non-avian dinosaurs. |
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Quoted: The movie got me thinking...what would actually happen? Given some big rock...something maybe as dense as lead...maybe 10 miles across....moving at tens of thousands of MPH...slams right into the Sahara desert. What happens? Does the earth's crust just break? Does the planet get knocked out of its orbit? (and if it does, what happens?) Does all the heat generated by the impact just incinerate the whole planet? I'm genuinely curious. I have a fairly decent grasp of physics, but never really contemplated the result of an impact to the planet like this. View Quote Answer here Distance from Impact: 10700.00 km ( = 6640.00 miles ) Projectile diameter: 16.10 km ( = 9.99 miles ) Projectile Density: 11343 kg/m3 Impact Velocity: 72.00 km per second ( = 44.70 miles per second ) (Your chosen velocity is higher than the maximum for an object orbiting the sun) Impact Angle: 45 degrees Target Density: 2500 kg/m3 Target Type: Sedimentary Rock Energy: Energy before atmospheric entry: 6.42 x 1025 Joules = 1.53 x 1010 MegaTons TNT The average interval between impacts of this size is longer than the Earth's age. Such impacts could only occur during the accumulation of the Earth, between 4.5 and 4 billion years ago. Major Global Changes: The Earth is not strongly disturbed by the impact and loses negligible mass. The impact does not make a noticeable change in the tilt of Earth's axis (< 5 hundreths of a degree). Depending on the direction and location of impact, the collision may cause a change in the length of the day of up to 98.4 milliseconds. The impact does not shift the Earth's orbit noticeably. Crater Dimensions: What does this mean? Transient Crater Diameter: 272 km ( = 169 miles ) Transient Crater Depth: 96.1 km ( = 59.7 miles ) Final Crater Diameter: 566 km ( = 352 miles ) Final Crater Depth: 1.99 km ( = 1.24 miles ) The crater formed is a complex crater. The volume of the target melted or vaporized is 404000 km3 = 96900 miles3 Roughly half the melt remains in the crater, where its average thickness is 6.97 km ( = 4.33 miles ). Thermal Radiation: What does this mean? The fireball is below the horizon. There is no direct thermal radiation. Seismic Effects: What does this mean? The major seismic shaking will arrive approximately 35.7 minutes after impact. Richter Scale Magnitude: 11.4 (This is greater than any earthquake in recorded history) Mercalli Scale Intensity at a distance of 10695.23 km: IV. Felt indoors by many, outdoors by few during the day. At night, some awakened. Dishes, windows, doors disturbed; walls make cracking sound. Sensation like heavy truck striking building. Standing motor cars rocked noticeably. V. Felt by nearly everyone; many awakened. Some dishes, windows broken. Unstable objects overturned. Pendulum clocks may stop. Ejecta: What does this mean? Little rocky ejecta reaches this site; fallout is dominated by condensed vapor from the projectile. Air Blast: What does this mean? The air blast will arrive approximately 9 hours after impact. Peak Overpressure: 35300 Pa = 0.353 bars = 5.01 psi Max wind velocity: 72.9 m/s = 163 mph Sound Intensity: 91 dB (May cause ear pain) Damage Description: Wood frame buildings will almost completely collapse. Glass windows will shatter. Up to 90 percent of trees blown down; remainder stripped of branches and leaves. |
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View Quote Golf clap.. well done. |
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Quoted: Erusea throws a fit over having to accept refugees, starting the Continental War and the formation of ISAF. View Quote Attached File |
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Quoted: I get all that. But specifically how. I'm wondering about the exact sequence of events. The idea of ash clouding out the sun and polluting the air is pretty straight forward. I'm wondering about the damage to planet itself. What happens to the globe? View Quote Damage to the planet itself? Minimal. To affect the planet would require something the size of the moon. And then? The earth resettles with two moons and it keeps going on. |
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Quoted: It's the internet feel free to do your own search but the facts are pointing to it..they have a team of 60 science / geologists doing the study. Pretty sure it's where the great flood stories are coming from. And where Atlantis went. @Star_Scream View Quote I did. I saw very little hard work into this one. Who are the "60 science/geologists"? |
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I'm a scienceologist, so I can confidently tell you that it would be like 9-11 x Y2K x Tonga.
Nobody can calculate a number that high, but it's over 9000. Yer def gonna die, fren. |
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In most asteroid disaster movies the final giant asteroid is seen rumbling overhead and disappearing over the horizon before impact. But a giant asteroid would streak in just as fast as the meteors we see every night, correct? Just a much bigger event at the end.
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When God comes and calls me to his Kingdom
I'll take all ya son's of bitches when I go Let 'er blow! -in minecraft |
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Quoted: Personally, I’d rather be instantly incinerated than live through, “The Road.” View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: That video is a 500 km rock. The one that smokes the dinosaurs was 10 km. Nothing survives a 500. At least at 10 some mammals and sealife lived Personally, I’d rather be instantly incinerated than live through, “The Road.” You are not wrong. Just the video shared is gonna kill anything but maybe some bacteria. 500 km is gonna be a reset button on a planet. Not just some species |
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Quoted: I did. I saw very little hard work into this one. Who are the "60 science/geologists"? View Quote I will have to look up the vroup again. They are self funded for the last 16 years if i remember right and based mostly out of Canada yet are the working group is scattered around fhe world. Read it and a few other articles a few years back looking up other asteroid meteor impacts and ran across it by chance. They were talking about the dust & soot layer left from the dino extintion astroind and found a closer top layer that points to the strike 12800 years ago. Now they are thinking it was a lot bigger then they thought since this 2nd layer is showing up worldside. |
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The Day the Dinosaurs Died – Minute by Minute
The Day the Dinosaurs Died – Minute by Minute |
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The earth would barely get her hair mussed.
Higher life forms will be kilt off ruthlessly. Those “living dinosaurs” like Alligators and Turtles? they'll be fine, just like the last couple times. |
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Quoted: The movie got me thinking...what would actually happen? Given some big rock...something maybe as dense as lead...maybe 10 miles across....moving at tens of thousands of MPH...slams right into the Sahara desert. What happens? Does the earth's crust just break? Does the planet get knocked out of its orbit? (and if it does, what happens?) Does all the heat generated by the impact just incinerate the whole planet? I'm genuinely curious. I have a fairly decent grasp of physics, but never really contemplated the result of an impact to the planet like this. View Quote |
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We'd probably all fucking die. If not immediately then fairly soon after.
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Quoted: I get all that. But specifically how. I'm wondering about the exact sequence of events. The idea of ash clouding out the sun and polluting the air is pretty straight forward. I'm wondering about the damage to planet itself. What happens to the globe? View Quote |
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The survivors would be cast in the movie ‘The Road”
Make sure you have more than 2 cartridges |
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