Did DINOSAURS hit the man for the MOON? Bones from reptiles were brought into space when the extinct asteroid broke into Earth 66 million years ago, scientists say
- An excerpt from ‘The End of the World’ by Peter Brannen was shared on Twitter
- He describes the asteroid that destroyed the dinosaurs 66 million years ago
- The asteroid was ‘puncturing a hole in an empty space in the atmosphere’
- Debris was removed from the impact mixed with dinosaur bones
- With this in mind, the scientists say that the moon may have bones
Although Neil Armstrong was the first man to graduate to the moon in 1967, dinosaurs may have struck it 66 million years earlier – or at least pieces of prehistoric creatures did.
The claim comes from Peter Brannen’s 2017 book, ‘The End of the World,’ which was recently written on Twitter by a blogger Matt Austin.
A section describes the violent asteroid while tearing ‘a hole of empty space in the atmosphere. ‘
This sent flying debris into orbit and ‘pieces of dinosaurs’ may have been mixed in the vast amount of earth that went out into space – all of which they fixed on the moon.
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Peter Brannen’s 2017 book ‘The End of the World’ proposes to remove the asteroid from dinosaur debris into space carrying dinosaur bones – all of which they set on the moon
The horrific asteroid crashed into what experts say was the ‘deadliest angle’ when it entered the Yucatanán peninsula of Mexico today.
Brannen, an award-winning science journalist, writes that the asteroid was larger than Mount Everest and entered the atmosphere 20 times faster than a distance bullet.
‘This is so fast that it would have crossed the distance from 747 sailing height to the ground in 0.3 seconds,’ the book reads.
The book incorporates comments from astronomer Mario Rebolledo at the Centro de Investigación who told Brannen: ‘The pressure of the atmosphere in front of the asteroid began digging the crater before it even arrived. ‘


A section describes the violent asteroid while tearing ‘a hole of empty space outside in the atmosphere. ‘This put flying debris into orbit and’ pieces of dinosaurs’ may have been mixed in the vast amount of earth that went out into space – all of which they fixed on the moon.
Then, when the meteorite hit zero, it was completely complete. It was so big that the feeling didn’t even scratch it. ‘
The book says that the scene 66 million years ago was nowhere near what we see in Hollywood movies that usually show an amazing fireball streaming across the sky.
‘As the asteroid hit the ground, in the skies above where air should be, the rock had hit a hole of empty space outside in the atmosphere,’ Brannen explains.
‘As the heavens ran in to close this hole, a huge amount of earth was sent out into orbit and beyond – all within a second or two of impact.’
‘So there may be small pieces of dinosaur bone on the moon,’ Brannen asks.
And Rebolledo responds: ‘Yes, perhaps. ‘

Although the book was published in 2017 blogger Matt Austin recently shard sections on Twitter
While there is no evidence to support claims in the ‘End of the World,’ scientists have been able to pinpoint the events that unfolded.
The asteroid left a 120-mile-wide crater at the crash zone, destroying rock and sending billions of tons of sulfur and carbon dioxide into prehistoric space.
Everything alive within hundreds of miles of the affected site would have been burned within minutes.
At the same time, the cloud of dust generated by the effect would block the sun – possibly leading to a ‘nuclear winter’ and seeing temperatures fall, acid rain falling from the skies and 75 percent of living species are extinct.
‘It would have felt like the earth beneath your feet had become a vessel in the middle of the ocean,’ said professor of earth and space science Mark Richards at the University of Washington.
‘Then rocks would explode from boiling air that was starting to glow with glue. It would be like the end of the world. ‘