Australia is so strange, so alien to this Earth in terms of flatness and rock age. Elsewhere, there's almost uniform tectonic plate shift and aging, whereas in the Pacific there's this flattened lump of land called Australia and NOTHING ELSE in the devastation zone apart from a few volcanic spurts of islandage; Hawaii, Indonesia, Polynesia etc. In fact, the following illustration shows what appears to be the target site of impact in the Marianas Trench region: old rocks in blue, new rocks in red. New Zealand and Indonesia would be the Impact Remnants of the second-moon landing that became present-day Australia (the video below does support such trailing debris for such an angled impact).
does this blue mark show where Australia landed, in the Mariana Trench 180 m.y.a. then slid south-west?
Planets and other rocks in space can have the same make-up, especially with the same accretion disc radial locality, so don't give me that look. Examine the gaps between the planetary debris fields...
- Saturn's rings + satellites
- Sun's rings + satellites
...it's all the same Solar System creation model.
furthermore, here's a DEPTH OF OCEAN image, again suggesting Australia crash-landed
and the lower southsouthwestern edge of Australia is compressed, turning a disc into a soft-croissant shape... this also gives us a DIRECT VERTICAL PATH for the impactor, free-falling in to our atmosphere just to the north-east of the impact site in the Marianas Trench region. Incidentally, both the Himalayas and the Rockies are radially equidistant from this ancient impact site of our second smaller moon.
Maybe someone could email/comment the calculations for the slowest gravitational impact of two such bodies, and the volume/mass/radius of such a second moon. I do know the Earth wobbles potentially because of such an impact and the Pacific Region is literally ruined or eradicated due to such. Is it possible that Australia was once Earth's (nearer, smaller) SECOND MOON and eventually soft-landed under free-fall gravitational forces hitting the Earth and splatting like the lead impactor in a slo-mo bullet impact video, like this:
that bullet remnant on the last frame, "That's Australia," is my contention.