Today’s a special day for astronomy enthusiasts: It’s both Asteroid Day and Meteor Watch Day. To celebrate, we’re at the rim of a 560-foot-deep crater with a 3,900-foot diameter, creatively called "Meteor Crater." (Scientists call it Barringer Crater, for the name of the man who first theorized it was a meteorite-impact crater.) Some 50,000 years ago, parts of an asteroid fell to Earth here, in a location just east of Flagstaff, Arizona. And today, we can see just how devastating the collision must have been to leave a basin so large.
The aftermath of a meteorite
Today in History
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International Literacy Day
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International Day of Peace
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The birth of Bauhaus
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Waiānapanapa State Park, Maui, Hawaii
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Portland celebrates its bounty
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The first ascent
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A tree of many memories
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International Sloth Day
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Look to the north sky tonight for the Perseids
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International Day of the Tropics
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Snow on the temple
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Here s looking Atchafalaya
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Independence Day
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Penn Station
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Lake Bled, Slovenia
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Aït Benhaddou, Morocco
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Coming home to roost
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A path lain with petals
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The Christmas Bird Count begins
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Death Valley National Park, California
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Bask in the glow—It s World Turtle Day
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Of moose and Maine
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The Roaches ridge in the Peak District, England
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Siblings that play together…
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International Roller Coaster Day
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