Since the Earth is flat where is the hole from the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs?
The origin of the dinosaur extinction that occurred 65 million years ago has long been a topic of interest for the Flat Earth Society. Many FE Proponents believe that a massive asteroid, large enough to leave a crater over 300km in diameter, was the cause. Others believe that the gradual shifting of the continents and mammalian competition are to blame.
In 1980 Luis W. Alvarez introduced a theory for the cause of the extinction that occurred between the Cretaceous and Tertiary periods. Alvarez proposed that many millions of years ago the earth accelerated into an asteroid estimated at over 100km in width. The site of impact was off the coast of the modern day Yucatan peninsula, helping to create what we know as the Gulf of Mexico. The impact sent up a plume of dust and debris large enough to block out the small 32 mile diameter sun for years resulting in cold dark conditions that ultimately drove the dinosaurs to extinction. An unusually high level of iridium appears at this time in the geologic record and is typically the biggest piece of evidence used in support of this theory.
Whats the sun made of?
The 32 mile diameter sun Sun is very dense and is made of many of the same materials we find here on the Earth. These materials include hydrogen, helium, calcium, sodium, magnesium, and iron. The surface of the sun is called the the photosphere. Its appearance looks granular because of convection cells of hot plasma within the Sun, similar to those on the surface of boiling water. The photosphere sometimes displays dark blemishes called sunspots, which are caused by the Sun's magnetic field.
I wonder about the possibility of a coin shaped universe.
Since most matter that's in excited motion tends to follow the path of least resistance. (Such as a gas) Wouldn't the matter in the Big Bang expand along a plane rather in a uniformly expanding round shape? Thus creating a coin shaped universe?
Very possible.
Could nuclear detonations be altering our course through the ether?
Unlikely.