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In May 2018, scientists documented in Campbell Islands in New Zealand, the largest wave ever recorded in the southern hemisphere of modern history.
It is 23.8 meters high.
Can you imagine a wave almost 70 times larger?
65 million years ago, an asteroid 14 kilometers in diameter struck the Earth with catastrophic consequences.
The impact opened a crater 180 kilometers in diameter, whose center is located in the current Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico.
Known as the Asteroid Chicxulub name of the nearest town to the crater, the celestial body would be part of a much larger asteroid that after a collision in space , would have been divided into several fragments.
Among other things, it may have helped to decimate the dinosaurs, which were the dominant terrestrial vertebrates.
In the first 24 hours, the impact of the tsunami spread from the Gulf of Mexico to the Atlantic.
"The asteroid Chicxulub caused a gigantic tsunami, as we have never seen in modern history," said Molly Range, senior research investigator, at the Science News site, Live Science.
"It was not until the beginning of this project that I understood the true magnitude of the tsunami."
Without a doubt, a turning point for our planet.
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