31 August 2025
Did TWO Asteroids Kill the Dinosaurs?
Here’s an intriguing thought experiment. Most of us grew up
with the familiar story: sixty-six million years ago a single, cataclysmic
asteroid slammed into what is now Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula, triggering a
chain reaction of firestorms, tsunamis, and a global “nuclear winter” that
spelled doom for the non-avian dinosaurs. But what if that cosmic assassin
wasn’t acting alone? What if it had a partner in crime?
Evidence is mounting that the dinosaurs’ extinction might
not have been the work of a lone space rock. Some scientists now suggest that
the fateful Chicxulub impact could have been part of a one-two punch,
with another asteroid – or even a fragmented sibling from the same parent body
– striking elsewhere on Earth around the same time. Imagine the devastation of
not one, but two apocalyptic collisions within a geological heartbeat.
This theory is explored in detail in a fascinating video by
ExtinctZoo (below), which dives into the latest research and speculation
surrounding Earth’s most infamous mass extinction. If true, it reshapes our
understanding of the end-Cretaceous event: not a solitary strike of bad luck,
but a cosmic double blow that ensured the age of dinosaurs was finished, once
and for all.