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#Asteroid

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#Asteroid Reel by @youfoundmxrs - Asteroid Hitting Earth

#solarsystem #spaceexploration #starryadventures
#galacticjourney #cosmicwonders
#astronomyvoyage #spacemagic #explorethecosmo
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@youfoundmxrs
Asteroid Hitting Earth #solarsystem #spaceexploration #starryadventures #galacticjourney #cosmicwonders #astronomyvoyage #spacemagic #explorethecosmos#beyondearth#StellarViews#nasa #galaxies #universe #astrophysics #spacevideos #space
#Asteroid Reel by @trippy_travels_ - The Chiculub impactor, a massive asteroid roughly 10 to 15 kilometers in diameter, struck the Yucatán Peninsula approximately 66 million years ago, tr
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@trippy_travels_
The Chiculub impactor, a massive asteroid roughly 10 to 15 kilometers in diameter, struck the Yucatán Peninsula approximately 66 million years ago, triggering a global catastrophe that ended the reign of the dinosaurs. Traveling at 20 kilometers per second, the collision released energy equivalent to 100 teratons of TNT, excavating a crater 180 to 200 kilometers wide and 20 kilometers deep. While the initial blast and megatsunamis caused immediate devastation, the most lethal consequence was the vaporization of sulfur-rich rocks, which injected hundreds of billions of tons of soot and aerosols into the atmosphere. This created a prolonged “impact winter” that blocked sunlight, halted photosynthesis, and caused global temperatures to plummet, leading to the extinction of 75% of all species on Earth. I KNOW YOU ARE LOVE THAT TECHNOLOGY!! SO HIT THAT FOLLOW BUTTON @trippy_travels_ . dm for credit or removal.🙏
#Asteroid Reel by @learn_with_adeesha - What would happen if a massive asteroid crashed into Mars? ☄️🔴

Asteroid impacts can release energy equal to millions of nuclear bombs, creating gian
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@learn_with_adeesha
What would happen if a massive asteroid crashed into Mars? ☄️🔴 Asteroid impacts can release energy equal to millions of nuclear bombs, creating giant explosions and massive craters on planetary surfaces. Scientists believe that huge asteroid collisions shaped many planets in our solar system — including Mars. This cinematic animation shows what a giant asteroid impact on the Red Planet might look like. 🌌 Follow Learn with Adeesha for more space discoveries, science animations, and amazing universe facts. 👍 Like | Follow | Subscribe for more fascinating science! #Mars #AsteroidImpact #SpaceScience #Astronomy #PlanetExplosion #SpaceFacts #Universe #ScienceForKids #LearnWithAdeesha #Cosmos
#Asteroid Reel by @torinindex - 😳

66 million years ago, the age of dinosaurs ended in a single day. ☄️🦖

A gigantic asteroid slammed into Earth with unimaginable force. Scientists
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@torinindex
😳 66 million years ago, the age of dinosaurs ended in a single day. ☄️🦖 A gigantic asteroid slammed into Earth with unimaginable force. Scientists estimate the space rock was about 10–15 kilometers (6–9 miles) wide — roughly the size of a major city like New York. When it hit our planet, the explosion released energy billions of times stronger than nuclear bombs. The impact created a crater nearly 180 kilometers wide and sent shockwaves across the entire planet. Massive earthquakes shook the Earth. Mega-tsunamis raced across oceans. Wildfires spread across continents. Dust and debris shot high into the atmosphere, blocking sunlight for months — possibly years — causing global temperatures to drop and ecosystems to collapse. About 75% of life on Earth, including most dinosaurs, disappeared. One asteroid. One impact. And the entire history of life on Earth changed forever. #dinosaurs #explorepage #viralvideos #ScienceFacts #virałreels
#Asteroid Reel by @extinctera.fan - Sixty-six million years ago, a massive asteroid roughly six to nine miles wide slammed into the shallow waters off Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula, moving
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@extinctera.fan
Sixty-six million years ago, a massive asteroid roughly six to nine miles wide slammed into the shallow waters off Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, moving at a staggering 43,000 miles per hour—sixty times faster than a bullet. The impact released energy equivalent to ten billion Hiroshima bombs, instantly vaporizing the surrounding seawater and ripping the Earth’s crust apart like tofu. In just five seconds, all life within 900 miles was turned to ash, before they could even register the pain. These were the "lucky" ones, spared from the prolonged nightmare that was about to unfold across the globe. As the crust shattered, rock was superheated into magma and hurled hundreds of miles into the atmosphere. This molten debris orbited the planet before raining back down as white-hot fire, pelting every inch of the Earth for several days. Forests spontaneously combusted, and the atmosphere heated to nearly 600 degrees Fahrenheit. The air itself became a wall of flame, with super-firestorms fueled by plummeting air pressure that created a literal vacuum, sucking fire into every valley. In just a few hours, a prehistoric paradise had become a global furnace. The horror didn't end with the fire. A massive curtain of silicate dust and soot eventually blocked out the sun, plunging the Earth into a "nuclear winter" that lasted for at least twenty years. Without sunlight, photosynthesis stopped. The lush ferns and towering conifers withered away, and the algae in the oceans died off in massive numbers. This triggered a total collapse of the food chain. Giant herbivores like Triceratops and Alamosaurus, needing hundreds of pounds of plants daily, were the first to starve. Soon after, the apex predators, including the mighty Tyrannosaurus rex, found themselves without prey, forced to scavenge on the remains of a dying world until they, too, succumbed to hunger.
#Asteroid Reel by @vlyxity (verified account) - This simulation visualizes the sheer scale of the Chicxulub impactor, the asteroid that struck Earth approximately 66 million years ago. Though often
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@vlyxity
This simulation visualizes the sheer scale of the Chicxulub impactor, the asteroid that struck Earth approximately 66 million years ago. Though often referred to as “the size of a city,” the asteroid was actually between 10 and 15 kilometers (roughly 6 to 9 miles) wide—roughly the length of Manhattan or the height of Mount Everest. Traveling at roughly 20 kilometers per second (over 44,000 mph), it slammed into the Yucatán Peninsula with the explosive force of 100 million megatons of TNT, or 4.5 billion times the power of the Hiroshima atomic bomb. While the asteroid itself was relatively small compared to Earth, the impact blasted a crater 150 to 180 kilometers wide and 20 kilometers deep, triggering a global “nuclear winter” and a mass extinction that wiped out 75% of all species, including the non-avian dinosaurs.☄️ #Astronomy #ScienceFacts #Space #Dinosaurs #History
#Asteroid Reel by @moneywoosh - NASA has successfully achieved historic DART (Double Asteroid Redirection Test) mission, which successfully impacted its target on September 26, 2022.
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@moneywoosh
NASA has successfully achieved historic DART (Double Asteroid Redirection Test) mission, which successfully impacted its target on September 26, 2022. ‎ ‎They crashed a spacecraft into Dimorphos, a small "moonlet" orbiting a larger asteroid named Didymos. This was the world's first planetary defense mission, designed to see if we could change the orbit of an asteroid by hitting it with a spacecraft. ‎The impact occurred about 7 million miles (11 million km) away from Earth while the DART spacecraft was traveling at roughly 14,000 miles per hour (22,500 km/h) at the moment of impact. ‎ ‎follow us for more videos about Space @moneywoosh Media: NASA on YT #space #nasa #asteroid #curiosity #universe
#Asteroid Reel by @forgottenearthfiles - ☄️ Everyone Thinks Dinosaurs Faced the Worst Extinction 💀🌍

They're wrong.

The asteroid that killed the dinosaurs was terrifying.

But it wasn't th
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@forgottenearthfiles
☄️ Everyone Thinks Dinosaurs Faced the Worst Extinction 💀🌍 They’re wrong. The asteroid that killed the dinosaurs was terrifying. But it wasn’t the deadliest day in Earth’s history. There was a moment far darker… When 96% of all life vanished. Here’s what really happened: 🌋 Endless Supervolcanoes: Eruptions lasting thousands of years, poisoning the sky 🌫 Toxic Atmosphere: Oceans turned acidic, oxygen levels collapsed 🔥 Runaway Global Warming: Temperatures spiked beyond survival limits 🌊 Dead Oceans: Marine ecosystems suffocated almost entirely 🦴 Mass Silence: Entire species erased with no recovery This wasn’t just extinction. It was near annihilation. Forests gone. Oceans emptied. Predators and prey wiped out together. Life didn’t just struggle. It almost ended. And the terrifying part? It happened long before humans existed. Earth has already proven it can reset everything. 💬 If 96% of life vanished today… do you think humanity would survive? 👉 Follow @forgottenearthfiles for more Deadliest Prehistoric Era files and the most brutal days in Old Earth history. 🎥 Video Credit: DM for credits/removal to the real owner. . . . #prehistoric #oldearth #extinction #earthhistory #forgottenearthfiles
#Asteroid Reel by @nebulory - This is the real size of the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs.
About 10-12 km wide, it released energy billions of times stronger than a nuclear
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@nebulory
This is the real size of the asteroid that wiped out the dinosaurs. About 10–12 km wide, it released energy billions of times stronger than a nuclear bomb, reshaping life on Earth forever. #DinosaurExtinction #AsteroidImpact #Chicxulub #SpaceFacts #EarthHistory
#Asteroid Reel by @nexyllo - Follow for daily content:-@nexyllo ⚡Around 66 million years ago, a massive asteroid known as the Chicxulub impactor struck Earth with unimaginable for
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@nexyllo
Follow for daily content:-@nexyllo ⚡Around 66 million years ago, a massive asteroid known as the Chicxulub impactor struck Earth with unimaginable force. In seconds, shockwaves, wildfires, and a global dust cloud covered the planet. The skies turned dark. Temperatures dropped. And nearly 75% of life on Earth disappeared — including the dinosaurs. This wasn’t just an impact. It was a reset button for life on Earth. Imagine standing there… watching the sky as a fireball larger than a mountain races toward you. Would humanity survive something like this today?

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#Asteroid is one of the most engaging trends on Instagram right now. With over 1.1 million posts in this category, creators like @nebulory, @torinindex and @learn_with_adeesha are leading the way with their viral content. Browse these popular videos anonymously on Pictame.

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💡 Top performing posts average 4.0M views (2.0x above average). Moderate competition - consistent posting builds momentum.

Post consistently 3-5 times/week at times when your audience is most active

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✍️ Detailed captions with story work well - average caption length is 701 characters

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Explore Asteroid#asteroid that killed the dinosaurs#classmate asteroid#hialose asteroide#asteroid 2025 os size#bekas tabrakan asteroid chicxulub#ohio asteroid debris field#asteroide vesta#asteroide que extinguió los dinosaurios