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The way I see it, the dinosaurs era was ended by the impact in the Pacific Rim Crates, million of years ago. It would be a gigantic meteors. Hundreds of miles in diameters!

2006-07-14 20:29:28 · 7 answers · asked by wacky_racer 5 in Science & Mathematics Earth Sciences & Geology

The Pacific impact I have mentioned which was created the crater is the ring of fire itself and had been zeroed in on Hawaii islands as its center of impact.

I guess anyone can observe why the ring of fire is as it is and Hawaii island is in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, where the most active volcanoes are in.

So, by my observation, it is a meteor impact, centered in Hawaii. As you might observe the effect of a stone in a shallow water. The soil will have a circular uproots around the center and in the middle is the most obvious uprooted impact.

2006-07-15 03:15:31 · update #1

Just a matter of observation!!! Take note in the middle of the Pacific Ring of Fire is the Hawaiian Islands!!!
Remember that the sun doesn't revolve around the earth! And the earth is not flat either!!!

2006-07-25 19:29:23 · update #2

7 answers

meteors ( meteorites) that big would not just have wiped out species, they would have shattered the planet.

2006-07-14 20:33:10 · answer #1 · answered by nickipettis 7 · 0 0

Let's look at what is going on down there. First fact is that the Pacific is getting larger and the Atlantic is getting smaller. For the same reason. The Pacific's ring (actually referred to as the Ring Of Fire) is the result of plate tectonics and is shown by sea floor spreading. Look up the Marianas Trench, earthquakes in Japan and California, the Ring Of Fire (with a side search on vulcanism in those areas) and rifts that they find the Black Smokers on. If you feel like going on after that check what is happening in the Atlantic and its subduction zone. The asteroid/meteor that splashed the hole off of Mexico may have finished the Mesozoic world but the dinosaurs were apparently already on the way out as evidenced by a major reduction in species. Overspecialization or/and climate change maybe. It happened at the end of the Paleozoic and the beginning of the mesozoic and gave the big reptiles the chance to own the world by wiping out up to 80% of the species living then. Check it out.

2006-07-14 20:52:23 · answer #2 · answered by Draken 2 · 0 0

1. The Hawaiian Islands are the result of tectonic plate moving over a mantle plume (or the plume moving below the plate -- it's a relative movement)
2. There is no Pacific Ring Impact.
3. If (and that is an LSD-induced type of "if"), the Pacific was the result of a meteorite impact, the meteorite would have been so large that the earth would have been destroyed -- not just killing the dinosaurs.

2006-07-23 16:34:23 · answer #3 · answered by idiot detector 6 · 0 0

There is no such thing as a Pacific Ring impact. You may be referring to the Pacific Ring of Fire, which is in no way related to meteor impact.

Like another guy said, an impact of this magnitude would have sundered the planet, not just killed off a few dinosaurs.

2006-07-14 21:36:20 · answer #4 · answered by wini_da_cutie 2 · 0 0

Gigantic meteors hundreds of miles in Diameter would have completely wiped out life on earth.

The bolide that impacted in Chixlub was in the order of 40KM, that was big enough to fry anything above the size of a dog.

Explain please why all the Hawaian lava flows show an increase in age away from Mauna Loa?

Where is your crater? Where are the markers? why was there no change in sea level? when did this impact happen?

short answer you are probably wrong, judging by your grammar I am guessing that you don't work for a top secret government lab with access to geophysical information the rest of the world doesn't know about.

If by some miracle you have some proof I'd be glad to see it.

2006-07-25 08:36:38 · answer #5 · answered by INFOPOTAMUS 3 · 0 0

Scientists do not exaggerate it even if the media does. and individuals on Yahoo! solutions oftentimes do. A one million mile huge asteroid does not reason that a lot damage to the planet, even if it may throw sufficient airborne dirt and dirt and steam into the air to critically replace the elements for destiny years, causing a "nuclear iciness". even if, the completed nuclear iciness theory is only a theory, not a properly-known actuality, and we do not recognize for particular how large an asteroid may be needed to reason it. about your added information, there is quite sturdy information that a ordinary meteor killed the dinosaurs. An asteroid about 6 miles in diameter hit and make a crater over one hundred miles in diameter, throwing airborne dirt and dirt and steam into the air and causing international darkness using thick cloud conceal that lasted for years. all the plants died for lack of sunshine and the dinosaurs starved. So it isn't the actual damage to the rocky structure of the Earth, it really is constrained to a crater being created; that is the elements disruption that kills.

2016-12-10 09:52:30 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Um, what Pacific Rim impact event would you be speaking of? There's no proof whatsoever that such a thing has ever occured. Me thinks you are confused.

2006-07-14 21:17:22 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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