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A giant meteorite boiled the oceans 3.2 billion years ago. Scientists say it was a ‘fertilizer bomb’ for life
When a meteorite with the mass of four Mount Everests hit Earth 3.2 billion years ago, it caused global chaos and provided an unexpected silver lining for life.
Giant meteorite impact 3.26 billion years ago may have aided early life
Billions of years ago, long before anything resembling life as we know it existed, meteorites frequently pummeled the planet. One such space rock crashed down about 3.26 billion years ago, and even today,
The positive impact of a giant meteorite that crashed into Earth more than 3 billion years ago
More than 2 billion years before the dinosaur-destroying meteorite, a meteorite the size of four Mt. Everests, known as S-2, crashed into Earth, creating a planetwide tsunami that actually had a positive impact on future life.
Ancient meteorite was 'giant fertilizer bomb' for life on Earth
The space rock that slammed into Earth 66 million years ago at the end of the Cretaceous Period caused a global calamity that doomed the dinosaurs and many other life forms. But that was far from the largest meteorite to strike our planet.
A giant, ancient meteor four times the size of Mount Everest may have sparked life on Earth
A giant meteorite first discovered in 2014 caused a tsunami bigger than any in known human history and may have sparked life, scientists reveal.
Meteorite 4x bigger than Everest struck Earth 3.26 billion years ago, sparking life
Some billions of years ago, Earth was a very different place. Long before life appeared on Earth, countless meteorites rained down on it. One such impact, known as the S2 event, occurred about 3.26 billion years ago and has left behind a trail of clues about our planet’s early history.
Life ‘may have thrived’ after giant meteorite hit Earth – research
Experts suggest the conditions caused by the impact of the S2 meteorite 3.26 billion years ago may have caused certain life forms to bloom.
Mega meteorite four times the size of Mount Everest boiled Earth's oceans
But another meteorite might have had an even bigger impact on life on earth, potentially even helping it to thrive in the first place. A huge space rock four times the size of Mount Everest named S2 is thought to have crashed into Earth around 3.
12h
on MSN
Meteorite 200X Size of Dinosaur Killer Hit Earth—Here's What Happened Next
Cataclysmic cosmic collisions may have benefited the evolution of primitive organisms early in Earth's history, a study says.
3h
on MSN
How ‘What We Do in the Shadows' Created a Monster That Is Definitely, Legally Distinct from the Frankenstein One
But for the artisans behind FX's "What We Do In The Shadows," that really does hold true. Paul Jones, the show's prosthetics ...
Inverse
8h
A Meteorite the Size of Four Mount Everests Hit Earth — It Left This Strange Aftermath
When a meteorite quadruple the size of Mount Everest slammed into ancient Earth, some microbial life thrived, a new study ...
9h
‘What We Do in the Shadows’ Season 6 Release Schedule: When Does the Final Season Air?
In the sixth and final season of the Emmy-nominated comedy, Nandor, Nadja, Laszlo, Colin and Guillermo will enter the ...
7h
The Magic of What We Do In the Shadows’s Set Is Found in Improv
The cast looks back on "the privilege" of getting to riff while making the FX comedy, as the final season debuts. The Magic ...
1d
on MSN
What Happened in ‘What We Do in the Shadows’ Season 5? Refresh Your Memory Before Final Season
Get ready to sink your fangs into the final season of What We Do in the Shadows . Based on the 2014 cult classic mockumentary ...
KTEN
19h
‘What We Do in the Shadows’ Team on Tackling the Office, Improv Moments & That Richard Nixon Impression
“That pee bucket thing used to be even longer and more back and forth about it,” showrunner Paul Simms tells TV Insider about ...
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