wp43545 Posted February 7 Posted February 7 Has anyone noticed the 2 large asteroid/meteor strikes north and south of South America? Looks like one took out a land bridge. If you trace the strikes and imagine the tsunami wave sand.... look at North Africa, The Southern tip of Africa, and Australia. Look at the color of that sand! So many questions here! Thank you
zapatos Posted February 7 Posted February 7 16 minutes ago, wp43545 said: Has anyone noticed the 2 large asteroid/meteor strikes north and south of South America? You'll have to be a bit more specific. "North and South of South America" covers a pretty large area.
wp43545 Posted February 7 Author Posted February 7 The northern path is from Cuba to the tip of the country. It fractured the tectonic plate. You can get a really good view with the volcanoes & earthquakes app I have on my phone.
Bufofrog Posted February 7 Posted February 7 8 minutes ago, wp43545 said: The northern path is from Cuba to the tip of the country. What country?
zapatos Posted February 7 Posted February 7 South America is not a country. What app is on your phone?
wp43545 Posted February 7 Author Posted February 7 Volcanoes & Earthquakes is the app. It is an asteroid/meteroid slide path.... not direct impact! Sorry...continent. Anxious
Bufofrog Posted February 8 Posted February 8 Looking at the Moon and Mars I see lots of circular craters, what I don't see are 'slides', which leads me to believe that what you are looking at is not a meteorite slide.
wp43545 Posted February 8 Author Posted February 8 You are not thinking big enough. Asteroid slide.... angle of the impact. Some bounce! It is there plain as day, right in front of your nose! Think bigger! -1
Moontanman Posted February 8 Posted February 8 16 minutes ago, wp43545 said: You are not thinking big enough. Asteroid slide.... angle of the impact. Some bounce! It is there plain as day, right in front of your nose! Think bigger! Can you give us any evidence of a meteorite sliding after striking the Earth? How would that work? What would a meteor have to made of to allow it to survive impact and slide?
sethoflagos Posted February 8 Posted February 8 (edited) I'm guessing you are referring to the apparent 'furrow' running roughly E-W from the SE end of Cuba to the coast of Belize. Compare with a tectonic map of the Caribbean area The feature clearly aligns with the northern boundary of the Caribbean plate, comprising two E-W transform faults flanking a small N-S trending rift zone. Yes, it looks like a furrow. But it's tectonic, not extraterrestrial in origin. Edited February 8 by sethoflagos 1
Bufofrog Posted February 8 Posted February 8 3 hours ago, wp43545 said: Think bigger! No thanks, I'll stick with thinking logically. 1
Moontanman Posted February 8 Posted February 8 4 hours ago, wp43545 said: You are not thinking big enough. Asteroid slide.... angle of the impact. Some bounce! It is there plain as day, right in front of your nose! Think bigger! Again, please provide a citation for sliding/bouncing asteroids, an asteroid impact releases outrageous amounts of energy. We need to see the justification for sliding/bouncing asteroids.
wp43545 Posted February 9 Author Posted February 9 Hmm... If it is a furrow as you say? How else would you explain the bottom of the ocean on top of North Africa, and do not forget the diamonds that were littered about the sand like common rocks (The German"s farmed the diamonds before WWII). -2
swansont Posted February 9 Posted February 9 4 minutes ago, wp43545 said: Hmm... If it is a furrow as you say? How else would you explain the bottom of the ocean on top of North Africa, and do not forget the diamonds that were littered about the sand like common rocks (The German"s farmed the diamonds before WWII). It would be helpful if you could provide sources, am\nd more detail, for your claims. i.e. what you’re referring to that’s at the bottom of the ocean on top of North Africa, and the diamonds.
Moontanman Posted February 9 Posted February 9 On 2/7/2024 at 8:11 PM, wp43545 said: You are not thinking big enough. Asteroid slide.... angle of the impact. Some bounce! It is there plain as day, right in front of your nose! Think bigger! Please give an example of a bouncing asteroid.
wp43545 Posted February 9 Author Posted February 9 I really do not care to argue about the subject. I just wanted to bring this to someone's attention. CYA -4
Moontanman Posted February 9 Posted February 9 5 minutes ago, wp43545 said: I really do not care to argue about the subject. I just wanted to bring this to someone's attention. CYA Your premise is flawed, impacting asteroids do not slide or bounce like a bullet hitting the ground would, asteroids would not be physically strong enough. You made this claim and touted it as true over and over while never giving a single example of this happening or even if it could happen. I would suggest you bring some evidence to back up your assertion before you try to bring baseless assertions to our attention.
swansont Posted February 9 Posted February 9 9 hours ago, wp43545 said: I really do not care to argue about the subject. I just wanted to bring this to someone's attention. CYA ! Moderator Note Then you've missed the point of a science discussion board. Since you aren't willing to back up your claims, this is closed.
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