Raining Frogs: Unraveling the Mysteries of Animal Rain

2 days ago
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The phenomenon of animal precipitation—creatures falling from the sky during rainfall—has been documented across centuries and continents. Notable incidents include thousands of frogs raining down in Trowbridge, England (1939), fish in Honduras, and even snakes in Memphis (1873). Once dismissed as folklore, modern science now explains these occurrences primarily through the waterspout or tornadic wind theory: powerful storm updrafts can create vacuum effects capable of lifting small animals (particularly aquatic species) into the atmosphere, carrying them considerable distances before depositing them elsewhere. The physics of terminal velocity and computational modeling support this explanation. Though challenging to study due to their unpredictability, these events have significantly influenced cultural narratives worldwide, appearing in religious texts, indigenous mythologies, literature, and film. As technology advances, researchers continue to investigate this rare yet genuine natural phenomenon that challenges our understanding of atmospheric dynamics and the natural world.

https://www.ihadnoclue.com/article/1125359355832991745

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