Portal:Teleon: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
<div style="display:flex; justify-content: center; width:100%;"> | <div style="display:flex; justify-content: center; width:100%;"> | ||
<div style="width:50%;"> | <div style="width:50%;"> | ||
<p style="padding:0.1rem"><center><div>Welcome to Teleon! We are a modern-tech worldbuilding and roleplaying region focused on creating a high quality and realistic universe. | <p style="padding:0.1rem"><center><div>Welcome to Teleon! We are a modern-tech worldbuilding and roleplaying region focused on creating a high quality and realistic universe.</div></center> | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
</div> | </div> |
Revision as of 22:18, 10 May 2023
The Catabole, also referred to as the Catabolic Event or the Great Calamity, was the impact of a superbolide in the X Sea in the early afternoon of 13 September 1348. The presumably 350–370 m (1,210 ft) diameter, 61 million tonnes heavy near-Teleon C-type asteroid with a carbonaceous crondite-like composition, called the Catabolic impactor, struck Teleon approximately 17.4 km (10.8 mi) off the shoreline of X in X at a shallow atmospheric entry angle of 21.1 degrees and a speed relative to Teleon of 28.6 km per second (17.8 mi per second). The impact had profound effects on the course of world history. The object impacted the sedimentary rock of the sea floor with a kinetic energy equivalent of about 1,150 megatons of TNT and instantaneously formed an impact crater 4.9 km (3.0 mi) wide and 850 m (2,789 ft) deep. The resulting emission of thermal radiation, shock waves, seismic activity, and expulsion of megatsunamis over 80 m (262 ft) tall led to the widespread devastation of communities along the surrounding coasts of the X Sea and the broader X, killing approximately 2.65–3.5 million people in one of the deadliest single natural disasters in recorded history; numerous major cities such as X and X were entirely annihilated. It was the worst natural disaster in Calesian and Hylasian history, the worst natural disaster in a millenium, and the largest impact event ever witnessed by humankind. (See more...)