A bit close

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Discussion

Stan the Bat

Original Poster:

9,254 posts

219 months

Friday 24th March 2023
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An asteroid coming close to Earth this weekend. !

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-650...

annodomini2

6,913 posts

258 months

Sunday 26th March 2023
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40-90m isn't that big in asteroid terms.

Will it make mess if it the Earth, of course, but the ones we need to be very aware of are the 1km+ rocks

Fiestapop11

62 posts

20 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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annodomini2 said:
40-90m isn't that big in asteroid terms.

Will it make mess if it the Earth, of course, but the ones we need to be very aware of are the 1km+ rocks
It's the other way around, you are more likely to be killed by a small meteorite than a large one that wipes out millions. Statistically wise. As time moves on this bias will increase.

Edited by Fiestapop11 on Monday 27th March 20:41

Simpo Two

87,066 posts

272 months

Monday 27th March 2023
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Fiestapop11 said:
It's the other way around, you are more likely to be killed by a small meteorite than a large one that wipes out millions. Statistically wise.
That would be a good question for QI: 'What's more likely to kill you, a small meteorite or a big meteorite?'

Fiestapop11

62 posts

20 months

Tuesday 28th March 2023
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Another interesting argument would be

"But how large is the historical data set? "

I'm guessing both are incredibly small to non existent.

So how much weight can you give to catastrophe modelling on both scales, both personal and species global?