No one has discovered bones on the moon. If they ever do, they might
reasonably conclude that the cow should have jumped higher.
no one has discovered bones on the moon... but if we are talking about the math answers, then "the cow didnt make it"
No one has discovered bones on the moon.
However if they ever do a reasonable conclusion would be that the cow should have jumped higher.
Europa - a moon of Jupiter.
Telescopes, Space missions, probes all help scientists discover more about the moon.
studying moon rocks gathered by astronauts ;D
That depends on which moon you are talking about. If you are talking about Earth's moon, Luna, it does not have any rings. There is no moon that scientists discovered that has rings.
The reason that this was that it was once the only thing that scientists could use to explain why the moon had so many craters on it (which we now know to be the product of meteorite and asteroid collisions).
they actually found bones on the moon???
no one has discovered bones on the moon... but if we are talking about the math answers, then "the cow didnt make it"
The cow didn't make it.
1). We would remark that this is hardly a math question, but more like a 'riddle'. 2). No one has discovered bones on the moon. If they ever do, they might reasonably conclude that the cow should have jumped higher. 3). The answer to the math punchline is "the cow didnt make it"
Scientists really haven't found bones on the Moon. If there were bones on the moon that might mean a really old astronaut was already there.
Scientists concluded that meteroroids had bombared the moons surface.