Quote:
Originally Posted by BlackEleven
Actually, most scientists predict that we'd have no advance warning if a meteor was to ever hit earth. There are literally millions of meteors floating around in space and its very hard to predict their path. The only way we currently have of knowing if a meteor was going to strike Earth is if someone just happened to be looking at one through a telescope; there is no system to track them.
And even assuming we did spot a meteor coming towards Earth, what would we do? Launch a nuke at it, a la Armageddon. All that would accomplish would be splitting the meteor into smaller meteors. Then the Earth would be pelted with several smaller, now radioactive, meteors.
In short, we'd be screwed.
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Actually there is a Nasa Program that tracks these, can't remember the name of it now. And one this big would be relatively easy to spot and would have quite a few years warning simply because of the size of it. It's the smaller one's that are more menacing just because there are so many of them.