Eight ways the world might actually end

 

Friday 21 December 2012 06:02 EST
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Asteroid DA14 is the size of a city block and will pass within 14,000
miles of Earth in February
Asteroid DA14 is the size of a city block and will pass within 14,000 miles of Earth in February (Getty Images)

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It might not be today, it might not be tomorrow, but as all Tele-evangelists and climate scientists agree, the end of the world - or at least humanity - is surely coming. The only question that remains is, how?

Daniela Hernandez at Wired magazine has complied a list of likely apocalyses (apocalypsi?) which makes enlightening, if profoundly depressing, reading.

Did you know, for instance, that "asteroid accident" and "comet collision" are two entirely distinct doomsday scenarios? While NASA predicts a non-world ending, but potentially city-destroying asteroid collision about every 110 years, comets (made of ice and dust, as opposed to rock and metals) are especially dangerous because they zoom into into our galaxy from farther away and at much higher velocities, and therefore are more difficult to detect.

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