Earth’s oldest known impact crater may tell us a lot about our planet’s frozen past0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web
- January 22, 2020
Yarrabubba Crater was blasted out by an asteroid or comet about 2.23 billion years ago.
Yarrabubba Crater was blasted out by an asteroid or comet about 2.23 billion years ago.
A strange series of color flashes that turned the night sky reddish in Bethel, Ohio, has gotten international attention, as people scramble for a good explanation.
The team used transmission electron microscopy to achieve this impressive video.
Crashed UFOs, alien autopsies and government cover-ups—untangling the legend surrounding Ohio’s Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
The space rock probably reached its orbit after a series of close encounters with rocky planets
Expect the unexpected.
Elon Musk’s SpaceX has destroyed one of its own rockets a day after bad weather forced the company to delay its final milestone test before flying Nasa astronauts from US soil.
Found in different galaxy than 1st signal, astronomers 1 step closer to finding out where these bursts thrive
The team of astronomers traced the journey of phosphorus, a key element in DNA, from star-forming regions to comets.
Fungus could be very much among us when humanity sets up shop on the moon and beyond.