What if I told you that scientists just discovered a cosmic scar on our planet that's older than multicellular life itself—a crater so ancient it witnessed Earth when it was practically an alien world?
The scientific community is buzzing with excitement over what might be the most significant geological discovery of the decade. Hidden in the rugged landscape of Western Australia's Pilbara region lies what researchers have now confirmed as the oldest impact crater ever found on Earth—a mind-boggling 3.47 billion years old. This isn't just breaking the previous record; it's absolutely shattering it by more than 1.25 billion years.
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Credits: Ron Miller, Mark A. Garlick / MarkGarlick.com ,Elon Musk/SpaceX/ Flickr
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00:00 Intro
00:30 the oldest impact crater ever found on Earth
2:10 Comparison with other craters discovered
5:30 Is there a connection between these impacts and Life's early development?
9:27 What this impact reveals?
13:30 The discovery becomes intriguing ( Pilbara Region)
13:40 Could the impact have temporarily sterilized Earth?
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#insanecuriosity #asteroidimpact #crater
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