Scientists at the SETI Institute conducted their own observation of the mysterious Oumuamua rock.
The space rock is currently hurtling through space at around 20,000 miles per hour.
Scientists analyzed the shape of fossilized shark teeth to predict how the animals responded to the changes occurring after the mass extinction event.
NASA’s Dawn has been imaging Ceres and its surface since 2015, but just recently, the agency released some of its photographs to show the uncanny similarities with Earth.
The asteroid was first spotted last year, but its features were not observed until June 2018.
The move comes just a few days after a small meteorite exploded with 2.8 kilotons of force over several Russian cities.
The spacecraft, which has flown nearly 280 million kilometers since taking to the skies, is part of a mission aimed at landing on the distant space object and retrieving samples for analysis on Earth.
The researchers compared the data from NASA's Dawn mission with a new standard to determine how much organic material could be there on the surface of the planet.
The asteroid, called 2018 LA, first appeared as a faint-streak in the observations taken by the NASA-funded Catalina Sky Survey in Arizona.
According to the research, the surge in CO2 levels was so much after the impact that local seawater temperatures rose by five degrees Celsius for 100,000 years.
Unlike planets and a vast majority of space objects in the solar system, the newly-discovered asteroid is moving in the opposite direction around sun, in a retrograde orbit.
As per theories, Planet Nine could be 10 times the mass of Earth and 20 times farther from the sun than Neptune.
The asteroid is hurtling through space at a speed of more than 46,000 kilometers per hour.
The rock formed in the inner reaches of our solar system but was pulled into a far-flung orbit beyond Neptune.
The study suggested the Red Planet might have collided with an object as big as asteroids Ceres or Vesta.
The discovery backs the theory that once many planets existed in our solar system.
Some 17,000 asteroids, each spanning at least 460 feet across, still remain undiscovered in our solar neighborhood.
Nearly 232 million years ago, massive volcanic eruptions took place and wiped out a big chunk of life on land and in the oceans.
The experiment by Russian scientists was to simulate the effect a nuclear weapon would have on an asteroid that was headed on a collision course with Earth.
The solar system’s first interstellar asteroid, thanks to a violent youth, has been tumbling through space for billions of years.
When astronauts touch down on an alien moon or an asteroid, their spacecraft might sink into a highly porous surface.
A nearby asteroid might one day strike Earth and devastate the planet, but it won’t be AJ129 next month.