Space & Astronomy
Does Dante's Inferno describe a catastrophic asteroid impact ?
By
T.K. RandallMay 14, 2026 ·
3 comments
Image: AI-generated (Bing AI / Dall-E 3)
Researchers now suggest that the 14th-century religious epic may have had a much different underlying meaning.
Dante's Inferno, which is the first part of Dante Alighieri's narrative poem
The Divine Comedy, famously describes the protagonist's descent through Hell itself.
In the poem, the underworld is made up of nine concentric circles, each offering new and creative forms of torment that Dante is forced to endure on his journey.
But what if the author had something else in mind when he wrote this famous work ?
According to new research headed up by Timothy Burbery of Marshall University, Dante's description of Hell as a great pit of nine concentric circles may have in fact been an interpretation of a deep asteroid crater produced by a large space rock slamming into the Earth, with the asteroid itself being a manifestation of Satan.
The nine circles, Burberry argues, could represent the different geological layers that can often be seen within impact basins created by asteroid impacts.
Dante may have had a surprisingly good understanding of natural disasters and impact threats.
But could his most famous work really be a 500-year-old thought experiment in impact physics ?
Certainly, if Dante really did have a grasp of the aftermath of an asteroid impact, the 'Hell' that his namesake descends through in the poem would have been hellish indeed.
Source:
Science Daily |
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Tags:
Hell, Asteroid
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