If aliens located 60-65 million light years away from us, looked at earth through a really powerful telescope today, they would see dinosaurs!
Aliens Could Be Watching Dinosaurs Right Now
Imagine this: somewhere out in the cosmos, an alien civilization has built the universe's most powerful telescope. They point it at our little blue planet, expecting to see cities, cars, maybe even catch a glimpse of humanity. Instead? Dinosaurs. Giant, scaly, very-much-alive dinosaurs.
This isn't science fiction—it's just how light works. And it's beautifully weird.
The Universe's Ultimate Time Delay
Light is fast. Ridiculously fast. It zips through space at about 186,000 miles per second. But "fast" doesn't mean "instant," and when you're dealing with cosmic distances, even light needs time to make the journey.
A light year is the distance light travels in one year—roughly 6 trillion miles. So when we say something is 65 million light years away, we mean the light leaving that place takes 65 million years to reach us. The reverse is also true. Light leaving Earth right now won't reach that distant point for another 65 million years.
What This Means for Our Hypothetical Aliens
If intelligent beings existed 60-65 million light years from Earth and looked our way today with an impossibly powerful telescope, they wouldn't see us. They'd see Earth as it was 60-65 million years ago—the late Cretaceous period.
Here's what would be on their screens:
- Tyrannosaurus rex stomping through ancient forests
- Triceratops grazing on prehistoric plants
- Pterosaurs soaring through skies with 30% more oxygen
- No humans, no cities, no internet (obviously)
- Continents in completely different positions
They'd have no idea that in "just" 65 million years, those dinosaurs would be extinct and replaced by a species that invented TikTok.
We're Doing the Same Thing
Plot twist: we're the aliens in this scenario for other parts of the universe. When astronomers observe distant galaxies, they're seeing ancient history. The Andromeda galaxy we photograph today? That's what it looked like 2.5 million years ago, when our ancestors were just figuring out stone tools.
Some galaxies we observe are so distant that we're seeing them as they were billions of years ago, not long after the Big Bang. Those galaxies might not even exist anymore in their current form—but we won't know for billions of years.
Could This Actually Happen?
Realistically? The technology required is beyond anything we can currently imagine. To see individual dinosaurs from 65 million light years away, you'd need a telescope with an aperture larger than entire star systems. The resolving power needed is incomprehensible with today's physics.
But the principle is sound. The light is out there, spreading through space, carrying images of T. rex and Velociraptors into the cosmos. Somewhere in the universe, that light is just arriving at distant worlds. Whether anyone's there to see it is another question entirely.
So yes—in the most literal sense—aliens could be watching dinosaurs on Earth right now. They'd just need to be in exactly the right place, at exactly the right time, with exactly the right (impossible) technology. The universe is a time machine, and we're all passengers.