@wakeupbarstool@stoolpresidente If we had a hockey team, a tennis team, a lacrosse team, it doesn't matter what kind of team we'll all be there cheering them on. If we have nothing then we have nothing better to do than cheer on our Huskers.
@konstructivizm The Chicxulub asteroid struck Earth 66 million years ago, triggering the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event. Its immense energy caused global fires, darkness, and climate collapse, wiping out about 75% of life, including non-avian dinosaurs.
The Chicxulub asteroid—a colossal space rock roughly 10 to 15 kilometers (about 6 to 9 miles) across—barreled toward Earth 66 million years ago with apocalyptic force.Imagine dropping this monstrous object right over downtown Manhattan: its immense bulk would tower nearly 30 times higher than the One World Trade Center's spire. The city's proudest skyscrapers would shrink to tiny, insignificant pinpricks against its overwhelming scale, like toys scattered at the base of a mountain.When it slammed into our planet, the collision unleashed raw energy equivalent to billions of Hiroshima-sized atomic bombs—some estimates place it at around 10 billion or more—vaporizing rock instantly and hurling trillions of tons of superheated debris skyward. This ejected material blanketed the upper atmosphere, plunging the world into a prolonged "impact winter" of darkness, cold, and ecological collapse.What makes the devastation even more mind-boggling? The asteroid was so enormous that it sliced through Earth's entire atmosphere in roughly one second, barely slowing before unleashing hell on the surface.The result: a cataclysm that erased about 75% of all species on Earth, including the non-avian dinosaurs, forever reshaping life on our planet.(Source: Lunar and Planetary Institute / University of Texas at Austin Jackson School of Geosciences,)
Take an epic journey into a lost world in THE DINOSAURS, a new documentary series narrated by Morgan Freeman, premiering March 6.
From executive producer Steven Spielberg, Amblin Entertainment, and the award-winning team behind Life on Our Planet.
@slyventure771@Super70sSports I understand that you might not like this song, but with all due respect you do not talk shit about anything to do with Led Zeppelin.