You would have recognized it. Despite how long ago 67,000,000 years is in comparison to human history, it's not that far back in Earth's 4,200,000,000 years.
There would be dinosaurs, of course, but also flowering plants and fruit trees, mammals like opposums and birds ancestral to ducks. There would also be grass, previously thought to have come along in the later Oligocene, but now recognized as existing as early as the Jurassic.
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650 million year ago there was no life on land and the only multicellular organisms were extremely simple; at most on the level of jellyfish.
By and large, aside from the messes left by the human infestation, yes. The Earth does look much the same as it did a million years ago. The Atlantic ocean might be a little wider, the Pacific a little narrower, the water level a little higher, but the place looks pretty much the same.
No.
That would only be possible if we could travel faster than the speed of light...a lot faster...and then you would have to get farther out than light from earth has traveled in the last million years and then look toward earth..then, in theory, you could see the past.
because earth was created by God.
what will christopher Allen crabtree look in twennty years