Quote from: Pleasingly Plump Jamie D on February 15, 2013, 04:13:09 PM
Joelene, have you heard of this one?
http://star.arm.ac.uk/impact-hazard/Brazil.html
There have been many events, most of them in remote places. More people are moving into these places that more reports of these will be more forthcoming. The Earth has had a lot of impacts in the past, but the weathering makes it difficult to find these places. The K-T event crater is covered by the Yucatan peninsula. It took oil exploration coring in that area to accidentally find the mystery crater that decimated what was left of the dinosaurs.
On October 8, 2008 a large meteor broke up above the Nubian Desert in northern Sudan. This was discovered as an asteroid 20 hours before it entered the atmosphere, the first discovery of a body that was predicted to hit the Earth. This was discovered by Richard Kowalski of the Catalina Sky Survey (CSS) on Mount Lemmon north of Tuscon, AZ. I do asteroid comfimations and I did some for the CSS, along with the usual suspects. The fragments of that was found in the desert with the help of female science students wearing chadors from the University of Khartoum.
Eugene Shoemaker, a geologist who trained the Apollo astronauts, did search for signs of impacts all over the Earth. He was also a co-discoverer with his wife Carolyn and comet hunter David Levy of the fragmented comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 that impacted in the upper atmosphere of Jupiter, giving it a series of black eyes that was visible for months through small telescopes. He died in an auto accident in the Australian outback searching for more.
Our Moon and Mercury does show the history of the bombardments. Mars has some weathering by wind, but there are clues that the northern part of Mars was hit by a massive asteroid in the past due to the lack of old cratering.
Joelene