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11 answers

Yes I do.

It is also what created the 23-1/2 degree tilt that gives us the seasons. The rock that hit us was no asteroid or meteor. It was a planetoid about half the size of Mars.

It was a good thing that it hit the Earth when it was still mostly molten, because if it had hit when the Earth had cooled, it would have destroyed this planet.

The impact literally squeezed the planet so that it squirted nickle and iron out like a lemon squirts juice. It took a while for everything to settle down, but when it was all over, we had a moon. Though it was a lot closer then than it is now. In fact, it would have dominated nearly half the sky, and been clearly visible during the day.

It also split the forming crust up into small sections that float on the mantle, thus allowing Earth to vent the enormous energies that churn in her core. Having a sphere of nickle/iron spinning at about the speed of Mercury creates a lot of friction, but it also keeps up the electro-magnetic field that shields us from the gamma radiation and particles the sun throws off every day.

If this planet had not gone through that growing pain, then we would be much like Venus, with a molten surface constantly in flux from the energies underneath.

2006-07-01 17:11:06 · answer #1 · answered by draygon_icewing 2 · 1 0

No I do not. I believe in Creation; that God created the heavens and the earth. Granted the Bible does not give details as to how He did this, but I know He did do it because only someone with great power and knowledge could set all these things into motion.

2006-07-01 17:15:53 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I can't remember too much on my reading, but I do remember that the moon was pulled into the Earth's orbit and it has been with us since then.Why it did not crash to the Earth in virtually unknown to me. But I do believe that the moon was originally a separate planet.

2006-07-01 17:02:04 · answer #3 · answered by jrmygray 3 · 0 0

Then they did find the Moon rock originated from Earth

2006-07-01 17:11:29 · answer #4 · answered by Chris 4 · 0 0

Your truly nauseating kissing up notwithstanding, cupcake, in case you do not comprehend what a clinical idea says, you likely shouldn't reject it until eventually you do. There are various complications including your "question:" a million. human beings do not "believe" in technological awareness - they settle for it. 2. the huge Bang idea has no longer something to do with the inspiration of existence. 3. the point is that no longer something became "created." each little thing developed because the end results of organic approaches. 4. there is not any information of any author - your conception is only a conception. technological awareness works on information.

2016-11-30 03:15:50 · answer #5 · answered by catucci 3 · 0 0

I saw that theory discussed at length on TV once. Not only did the collision create the moon, but it also affected our topography so that we have continents and deep oceans, rather than shallow lagoons across the whole planet.

It sounds plausible, but I'm not an astrophysicist.

2006-07-01 17:00:16 · answer #6 · answered by thunderpigeon 4 · 0 0

A glancing blow from any side, is, after all much more likely than a "hit" within the circumferance of the globe, which seems in contradiction to the constantly unsubstantiated theory that the meteor impacted and stayed.

2006-07-01 17:32:43 · answer #7 · answered by Pup 5 · 0 0

Meteor isn't the right word, planetesimal is the one you're looking for.

Yes, It explains the earth axial tilt and the proportional bias of lightweight elements that compose the moon.

2006-07-02 05:21:43 · answer #8 · answered by corvis_9 5 · 0 0

moon is too large for that
I believe the official version is that moon was a different planet in solar system, but got trapped by Earth.

2006-07-01 16:54:48 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i have no clue how the earth formed but then again nobody does

2006-07-01 17:26:15 · answer #10 · answered by candygirl 2 · 0 0

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