Arizona’s Meteor Crater and other scars leftover from collisions with space rocks continue to serve up their secrets.

Meteor Crater formed some 50,000 years ago. It represents the best preserved meteor impact site in the world, measuring some 700 feet deep (213 meters), more than 4,000 feet across (1,219 meters), and 2.4 miles (3.9 kilometers) in circumference.

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Earth marks the transition from the Cretaceous to the Paleogene eras, about 66 million years ago, he added.

The most iconic species that has fallen victim to an impact, the dinosaurs, “literally had no chance,” Koeberl said.

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Read more: 10 Earth impact craters you must see

an aerial view of a large, round crater in a desert landscape

Aerial shot of Meteor Crater aka Barringer Crater, near Winslow, Arizona. (Image credit: Chris Saulit/Getty Images)

Barringer Family Fund applications and awards are administered by The Meteoritical Society and are due by April 1.