Thank you for sharing the video. For the past 7 years I watch a lot of meteor documentary on UA-cam and other streaming media but they never mention about the museum at the crater in Arizona. So after looking on the Google map for the crater in Arizona I notice the Touring Meteor Space Museum at the edge of the crater on the map. I didn't think there was a museum but glad they made one. I decided to look up on UA-cam for any tour so I came across your video. Your video was great! Thx for sharing. Hopefully someday I'll go even though I'm in Connecticut is a long way out.
This is amazing! So much info, and such a wonderful sight. The only time I've seen a meteor crater was on Gran Canaria, I think. There's a gigantic caldera that they say was made from a huge meteor some time ages ago. (Very technical term. "Ages ago...")
The meteor landed in water. Being about 50 meters in diameter, the splash of water and setiment formed the larger rim of the crater. Make sense? I could be wrong.
Talk about luck! That meteor almost hit the VISITOR CENTER!!!
Thank you for sharing the video. For the past 7 years I watch a lot of meteor documentary on UA-cam and other streaming media but they never mention about the museum at the crater in Arizona. So after looking on the Google map for the crater in Arizona I notice the Touring Meteor Space Museum at the edge of the crater on the map. I didn't think there was a museum but glad they made one. I decided to look up on UA-cam for any tour so I came across your video. Your video was great! Thx for sharing. Hopefully someday I'll go even though I'm in Connecticut is a long way out.
I have to check that out, great content
I've always wanted to go to a massive feckin' hole in the ground. This is the daddy, though. Awesome stuff!
Amazing!
Awesome! I haven't heard of this before, but it's now on my list to visit!
That’s got to be amazing to see! Love to travel and see that place!
I was there three weeks ago. It is an amanzing place.
This is amazing! So much info, and such a wonderful sight. The only time I've seen a meteor crater was on Gran Canaria, I think. There's a gigantic caldera that they say was made from a huge meteor some time ages ago. (Very technical term. "Ages ago...")
They need to terraform the desert. It would help save the Earth.
The meteor landed in water. Being about 50 meters in diameter, the splash of water and setiment formed the larger rim of the crater.
Make sense?
I could be wrong.
It was not a desert there was lots of verdure and megafauna.
Let me see your travel visa.