Photos: Meteor Crater still a big hit
About 50,000 years ago, a 150-foot-wide chunk of rock (92 percent iron, 7 percent nickel and 1 percent trace elements) moving at around 26,000 miles an hour from the north or northeast, struck Earth near what would later be Winslow, Ariz., at an 80-degree angle. The result? A crater more than 4,100 feet wide, and more than 570 feet deep. The resulting Meteor Crater is now thought to be the best- preserved such location in the world, and showcases how dangerous even relatively small rocks can be if they hit our planet.
CNET's Daniel Terdiman made a stop at the crater on his
This is the crater, as seen from the north, looking south.










