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Discovery Channel - Miracle Planet - Large Asteroid Impact Simulation ✮ 〈Fresh〉

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While the simulation is a chilling reminder of Earth's "violent past," it also highlights the incredible resilience of life. Today, missions like NASA’s DART provide a more hopeful outlook, proving we might finally have the technology to prevent such a simulation from becoming a reality. Animated simulation of asteroid hitting Earth

Within a single day, the entire surface becomes uninhabitable, vaporizing all life. Why Life Didn't End Forever

Scientists believe early life-forms survived by living deep underground or within the ocean's crust, shielded from the surface inferno.

Experience the cinematic and scientific terror of the 'Miracle Planet' simulations below: Miracle Planet - Asteroid Impact Simulation YouTube · racefanvideo DiscoveryChannel Miracle Planet Violent Past YouTube · zwartl Discovery Channel - Large Asteroid Impact Simulation YouTube · Anselmo La Manna

A blanket of vaporized rock, as hot as the surface of the sun, encircles the globe within 24 hours.

A wall of pressure travels across the globe at hypersonic speeds, flattening everything in its path.

Each "miracle" impact forced life to acquire new abilities to survive, eventually leading to the complex diversity we see today, including humans.

Despite the total destruction shown on the surface, "Miracle Planet" explores how these "planet-cleansing" events actually paved the way for modern life:

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About the Pixelattos

Most people think that the first Pixelatto dated early 2019 or so, since they’re mostly know for Reventure, but the fact is that there’s fossil evidence of living specimens back at 2014.

Contract work is not as popular as making own videogames, but for these organisms it somehow enabled their survival and adaptation to the environment…

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Discovery Channel - Miracle Planet - Large Asteroid Impact Simulation ✮ 〈Fresh〉

While the simulation is a chilling reminder of Earth's "violent past," it also highlights the incredible resilience of life. Today, missions like NASA’s DART provide a more hopeful outlook, proving we might finally have the technology to prevent such a simulation from becoming a reality. Animated simulation of asteroid hitting Earth

Within a single day, the entire surface becomes uninhabitable, vaporizing all life. Why Life Didn't End Forever

Scientists believe early life-forms survived by living deep underground or within the ocean's crust, shielded from the surface inferno. While the simulation is a chilling reminder of

Experience the cinematic and scientific terror of the 'Miracle Planet' simulations below: Miracle Planet - Asteroid Impact Simulation YouTube · racefanvideo DiscoveryChannel Miracle Planet Violent Past YouTube · zwartl Discovery Channel - Large Asteroid Impact Simulation YouTube · Anselmo La Manna

A blanket of vaporized rock, as hot as the surface of the sun, encircles the globe within 24 hours. Why Life Didn't End Forever Scientists believe early

A wall of pressure travels across the globe at hypersonic speeds, flattening everything in its path.

Each "miracle" impact forced life to acquire new abilities to survive, eventually leading to the complex diversity we see today, including humans. Each "miracle" impact forced life to acquire new

Despite the total destruction shown on the surface, "Miracle Planet" explores how these "planet-cleansing" events actually paved the way for modern life: