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Top 10 Weirdest Weather Phenomena

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It seems like every year the weather gets crazier than the last. You see reports about torrential flooding and other extreme weather on the news pretty much all of the time – some may argue, but it looks like climate change caused by human activity is indeed a real thing. Polar icebergs melting at increasingly alarming rates will cause sea levels to rise in the future. On the flip side of the coin, the fire season in the hot, dry regions of the west coast of North America lasts roughly 75 days longer than it did a decade ago. Yes, climate change seems imminent, but there are still some pretty rare natural meteorological occurrences to look out for.

1Non-Aqueous Rain: It's Raining Men, I Mean Fish, Hallelujah
a98965_lluvia-de-peces.jpg

Stories of raining animals or objects date back to the first century A.D. when Pliny The Elder first documented frogs falling from the sky. In 1794, French soldiers also witnessed a rain of toads. Even in the present day, Hondurans experience the Lluvia de Peces phenomenon.

What is Lluvia de Peces, you ask? In Yoro, Honduras the skies literally rain fish and it's been happening annually for more than a century.

One common explanation for animals falling from the sky can be attributed to waterspouts, but the nearest marine source for fish for the Lluvia de Peces phenominon is over 200 km (140 miles) away and waterspouts just don't travel that far. This event may also be connected to fresh water fish moving to subterranean water due to seasonal changes. Heavy rains possibly wash the fish up and when the water recedes, the fish are stranded on land.

Some believe that when Spanish priest Father José Manuel (Jesus de) Subirana saw how poor and hungry the locals of Yoro were, he prayed for the miracle of food to be bestowed upon the people. After praying for 3 days and 3 nights, the people were rewarded with this rain of fish.

With all of this raining fish it makes you think – could Sharknado become a reality?

2Fallstreak Hole: U.F.O. - O.F.R.!
a98965_Fallstreak-hole-880x660.jpg

Some people see some truly strange things and others see what they want to see. Take this recent story of people in Stockton, CA who claimed they saw a huge hole in the sky. These spectators took to social media and speculated that the hole was caused by everything from an alien spacecraft to an intergalactic wormhole. In actuality, the U.F.O. was a fallstreak hole, also known as a hole punch cloud.

Cirrocumulus or altocumulus clouds containing super-cooled water that can't freeze without a tiny particle to cling to cause fallstreak holes. Scientists believe that when airplanes fly through these clouds they start the process of ice forming and crystallizing. Air passing around an airplane's propellers or wings makes the air expand and cool rapidly and ice crystals form, then drop below a cloud long after a plane has passed through it.

Perhaps one of these fallstreak holes inspired Black Sabbath in their classic song, “Hole In the Sky”:

“I'm looking through a hole in the sky
I'm seeing nowhere through the eyes of a lie
I'm getting closer to the end of the line
I'm living easy where the sun don't shine”

3Firenado: When wildfires turn into whirling twisters
a98965_cocos.jpg

The fire whirl is a rare occurrence in which a fire forms a tornado-like vortex of flames. These vicious cyclones of flame are also known as firenados or fire devils and no wonder – these babies look like they come straight out of the deepest bowels of hell!

These hellish whirling dervishes of fire occur when trees, a hillside or flames force air to shift against competing air temperatures and speeds. While some fire whirls peter out pretty quickly, others can travel when the heat is able to stay afloat and surrounding gasses push it tighter onto itself.

Perhaps the deadliest example of a firenado happened in 1923 in Japan in the aftermath of a massive 7.9 earthquake. Survivors of the disaster gathered together in an open space, but a massive firenado occurred and swept through the space, killing thousands.

4Catatumbo Lightning: The largest and longest light show on Earth
a98965_article-2336338-1A284416000005DC-840_964x755.jpg

You've heard the term, “the perfect storm,” right? Yes, a perfect storm, where a series of events happen simultaneously that drastically aggravates a situation. This lightning phenomenon is so rare that it only occurs in one place on Earth because of a perfect storm of location and natural gasses.

Catatumbo lightning occurs only over the mouth of the Catatumbo River in Venezuela where it empties into Lake Maracaibo. Warm and cold fronts meet creating the perfect condition for this lightning. Add nearby marshes emitting methane gas which in turn improve the electrical conductivity of the clouds and voila! You've got one badass atmospheric phenomenon.

Catatumbo lightning usually occurs 140 to 160 nights a year, but ceased for a few months in 2010 which caused many locals to worry. Much to their relief, the lightning has since returned stronger than ever.

5Fire Rainbow: An aerial kaleidoscope of color
a98965_article-2188615-148DAF69000005DC-72_964x721.jpg

Fire Rainbows are so cool and rare that maybe the Land of Oz really does lie somewhere over them!

Technically known as a circumhorizontal arc, conditions have to be very precise for these rainbows to occur. They usually occur during the summer months – the sun has to be at an elevation of 58° or greater with high altitude cirrus clouds and sunlight entering the ice crystals of the clouds at just the right angle.

These are some big clouds too, my friend! They are so large that some have mistaken the rainbow to be part of the sky rather than the cloud.

Also known as an ice halo, the circumhorizontal arc is actually neither fire nor a rainbow.
 
It seems like every year the weather gets crazier than the last. You see reports about torrential flooding and other extreme weather on the news pretty much all of the time – some may argue, but it looks like climate change caused by human activity is indeed a real thing. Polar icebergs melting at increasingly alarming rates will cause sea levels to rise in the future. On the flip side of the coin, the fire season in the hot, dry regions of the west coast of North America lasts roughly 75 days longer than it did a decade ago. Yes, climate change seems imminent, but there are still some pretty rare natural meteorological occurrences to look out for.

1Non-Aqueous Rain: It's Raining Men, I Mean Fish, Hallelujah
a98965_lluvia-de-peces.jpg

Stories of raining animals or objects date back to the first century A.D. when Pliny The Elder first documented frogs falling from the sky. In 1794, French soldiers also witnessed a rain of toads. Even in the present day, Hondurans experience the Lluvia de Peces phenomenon.

What is Lluvia de Peces, you ask? In Yoro, Honduras the skies literally rain fish and it's been happening annually for more than a century.

One common explanation for animals falling from the sky can be attributed to waterspouts, but the nearest marine source for fish for the Lluvia de Peces phenominon is over 200 km (140 miles) away and waterspouts just don't travel that far. This event may also be connected to fresh water fish moving to subterranean water due to seasonal changes. Heavy rains possibly wash the fish up and when the water recedes, the fish are stranded on land.

Some believe that when Spanish priest Father José Manuel (Jesus de) Subirana saw how poor and hungry the locals of Yoro were, he prayed for the miracle of food to be bestowed upon the people. After praying for 3 days and 3 nights, the people were rewarded with this rain of fish.

With all of this raining fish it makes you think – could Sharknado become a reality?

2Fallstreak Hole: U.F.O. - O.F.R.!
a98965_Fallstreak-hole-880x660.jpg

Some people see some truly strange things and others see what they want to see. Take this recent story of people in Stockton, CA who claimed they saw a huge hole in the sky. These spectators took to social media and speculated that the hole was caused by everything from an alien spacecraft to an intergalactic wormhole. In actuality, the U.F.O. was a fallstreak hole, also known as a hole punch cloud.

Cirrocumulus or altocumulus clouds containing super-cooled water that can't freeze without a tiny particle to cling to cause fallstreak holes. Scientists believe that when airplanes fly through these clouds they start the process of ice forming and crystallizing. Air passing around an airplane's propellers or wings makes the air expand and cool rapidly and ice crystals form, then drop below a cloud long after a plane has passed through it.

Perhaps one of these fallstreak holes inspired Black Sabbath in their classic song, “Hole In the Sky”:

“I'm looking through a hole in the sky
I'm seeing nowhere through the eyes of a lie
I'm getting closer to the end of the line
I'm living easy where the sun don't shine”

3Firenado: When wildfires turn into whirling twisters
a98965_cocos.jpg

The fire whirl is a rare occurrence in which a fire forms a tornado-like vortex of flames. These vicious cyclones of flame are also known as firenados or fire devils and no wonder – these babies look like they come straight out of the deepest bowels of hell!

These hellish whirling dervishes of fire occur when trees, a hillside or flames force air to shift against competing air temperatures and speeds. While some fire whirls peter out pretty quickly, others can travel when the heat is able to stay afloat and surrounding gasses push it tighter onto itself.

Perhaps the deadliest example of a firenado happened in 1923 in Japan in the aftermath of a massive 7.9 earthquake. Survivors of the disaster gathered together in an open space, but a massive firenado occurred and swept through the space, killing thousands.

4Catatumbo Lightning: The largest and longest light show on Earth
a98965_article-2336338-1A284416000005DC-840_964x755.jpg

You've heard the term, “the perfect storm,” right? Yes, a perfect storm, where a series of events happen simultaneously that drastically aggravates a situation. This lightning phenomenon is so rare that it only occurs in one place on Earth because of a perfect storm of location and natural gasses.

Catatumbo lightning occurs only over the mouth of the Catatumbo River in Venezuela where it empties into Lake Maracaibo. Warm and cold fronts meet creating the perfect condition for this lightning. Add nearby marshes emitting methane gas which in turn improve the electrical conductivity of the clouds and voila! You've got one badass atmospheric phenomenon.

Catatumbo lightning usually occurs 140 to 160 nights a year, but ceased for a few months in 2010 which caused many locals to worry. Much to their relief, the lightning has since returned stronger than ever.

5Fire Rainbow: An aerial kaleidoscope of color
a98965_article-2188615-148DAF69000005DC-72_964x721.jpg

Fire Rainbows are so cool and rare that maybe the Land of Oz really does lie somewhere over them!

Technically known as a circumhorizontal arc, conditions have to be very precise for these rainbows to occur. They usually occur during the summer months – the sun has to be at an elevation of 58° or greater with high altitude cirrus clouds and sunlight entering the ice crystals of the clouds at just the right angle.

These are some big clouds too, my friend! They are so large that some have mistaken the rainbow to be part of the sky rather than the cloud.

Also known as an ice halo, the circumhorizontal arc is actually neither fire nor a rainbow.
Informative !
 
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