5 Times the World Was Supposed to End in 2015
今年有五次世界幾乎末日
As 2015 comes to a close, we reflect
on some of the close brushes we’ve had with death this year. Surprisingly, the
year has been filled with incidents and predictions for the end of the world
and destruction of Earth as we know it.
From earthquakes to supermoons, maybe
the planet was in more danger than we thought!
Check out five times that people
really thought the Earth might end in 2015.
1)
The Blood Moon 血腥的月球
The lunar eclipse in late September of 2015 was dubbed a
“blood moon,’ because it was expected to turn a magnificent glowing red. The
eclipse coincided with a supermoon—meaning the moon is at its closet point to
the Earth—which caused some people to speculate that the night-time event might
bring forth the apocalypse.
2)
Huge Asteroid Expected to Destroy Earth in September
Causes Widespread Panic九月有大星球預料會摧毀地球而引起全球的恐慌
“Asteroids-環繞太陽小而無氣體的石頭塊體,因體積太小而不配稱為行星,祇能被稱為小行星
In September a 2.5-mile-wide asteroid
had people fearing for their lives. Many claimed that sometime toward the end of September the huge
asteroid would strike the Earth, ending all life on the planet. Since the Earth
is still here and there was no major asteroid impact, it’s safe to say that
those predictions never came true.
3)
NASA Admits There’s an Asteroid Nearing Earth太空總署承認有一個小星球靠近地球
In mid-October, NASA announced that a
huge asteroid was hurtling for a close shave at Earth. Apparently
the agency had been monitoring the massive space rock, measured to be
approximately 1.6 miles wide, for years.
4)
Two Asteroids Head Toward Earth on Halloween萬聖節當天有兩個小行星朝地球而來
Halloween this year was supposed to be
extra spooky, because it was widely reported that two asteroids were headed
toward Earth. Although NASA made it
clear that the asteroids wouldn’t even come close enough to hit the Earth—or
even be seen by the naked eye—many began to speculate with wild conspiracy
theories that the space program
5)
Massive Earthquake in California加州大地震
Back in May, the man famous for predicting the
Nepal earthquake said that California would be struck by a devastating 8.8
scale quake. Seismologists have always affirmed that there is no scientific way
to calculate the exact time an earthquake will hit.
Despite this, earthquake enthusiast
Frank Hoogerbeets went so far as to predict the precise time –4 p.m.—that the
quake would shake the state. He claims to use “planetary alignments” as the
basis for his predictions.
12/29/2015
網路資訊
Justin Lai
沒有留言:
張貼留言