News3 mins ago
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by doyleboy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
There are a range of 'conspiracy' theories which vary - climate change is the most popular, but meteors from space are included, as are a sudden 'plague' and various other notions. I'm more intrigued by the accepted notions that they were all a slate grey colour, roared and moved slowly, when for all we know, they could have been furry, battenburg coloured, run like greyhounds and squeaked like mice! Who knows?
A huge meteor impact is a very likely situation, if it imapcted the sea it would create a huge tsunami, along with that would put so much dust and debris into the atmosphere that it could block out the sun, this could possibly last for months, along with the flooding they probably wouldn't stand a chance.
Scientists can predict the sounds they made by the size and shape of their bones.
The fact is, no-one knows. Certain evidence shows a change in the Earth's climate (e.g. fossils of new trees suddenly appear at the time, which could survive a colder climate). What caused the change? Some evidence suggests a meteor falling to Earth (e.g. a layer of dark sediment has been found which is thought to have covered much of the Earth's surface). But nobody knows for certain. Scientific 'evidence' is only available information, not incontrovertible , unmistakable truth.