The same is true of life, like fine glass, usually can not withstand the impact of natural and man-made, one to smash into the bright, each is a transparent heart.
Life is the same, like the delicate wineglass, can't afford to the natural disaster strike, the resplendent shattered into pieces on the land, each piece is a transparent heart.
An iridium-enriched sediment layer and a large impact crater in the Yucatn provide evidence that a large meteorite struck Earth about 65 million years ago.
The region, which was the target of a recent NASA mission that intentionally crashed an unmanned spacecraft to look for frozen water, could be ideal for a future human outpost.
Now utopia has grown unfashionable, as we have gained a deeper appreciation of the range of threats facing us, from asteroid strike to epidemic flu and to climate change.
For space enthusiasts who stayed up, or woke up early, to watch the impact on Oct. 9, the event was anticlimactic, even disappointing, as they failed to see the anticipated debris plume.