DID HOMO SAPIENS FINISH OFF THE DINOSAURS?
Japanese scientists have performed a miracle. They succeeded in landing a probe, called Falcon, on an asteroid, took some samples and got off. The material is still on its way back, but tests of the “asteroid-dust” can be performed and the results are broadcasted back to earth. The Japanese came to a stunning conclusion. The asteroid was supposed to be a massive rock; instead it was compartementalized (kind of cocoons) and at least 40/50 procent hollow! If this goes for all the asteroids, and why not, we have to revize our past and our present-day future.
What comes in mind first, are of course the dinosaurs. They were said to have been extinct by an asteroid, around 65 million years ago. A few mamals survived miracilously and conquered a new world. I suppose the scientists have calculated the world-wide effects on the above mentioned assumption: the asteroid was massive! Now we have to recalculate. The effects of the impact would be much less and, being hollow, much of the asteroid would evaporate and burn up in the atmosphere. Still it would be a disaster and I think most dinosaurs died, but some may have survived on certain locations, like wolly mammoths, who lived way beyond their official extinction date, in Siberia and Antartica. On the other hand it would be much easier for the mammals to survive and evolve. Man would appear sooner and dinosaurs crossed their path. This explains the finds in South-America, like the “Ica stones”, on which human beings are fighting and even riding dinosaurs. According to legend, fairy tales, and folklore, mankind did the only natural thing, they killed them, like they killed the giants and many of the big dragon slainers or giant-killers, became Saints in the Roman Catholic Church.
We live in apocalyptic days, at least that what the “mindpolice” wants to make us think. One of the big issues is an asteroid impact as one of the signs of the End Times. Science supported it (as they will support anything, it pays well enough) and big telescopes were built to track them down and follow the few (among hundreds ot thousands rotating rocks), that seem to be on a collision course. There is no problem anymore. Asteroids have not enough mass to impact, just a handful of dust, so to say. A couple of rockets will do it.