After centuries of
weather forecasting study and research, the human race knows a thing or two
about storms. We know that hurricanes
and typhoons will spin out of the oceans every summer and ravage certain
coastlines. We know that tornadoes will
strike thousands of times per year, causing significant localized damage, and
we generally know where they will appear and why. We can even predict which years will bring
particularly strong weather patterns and what those patterns will mean for
farmers, ranchers and others.
But, the truth is, we don't know
everything. At least the general population doesn't. In fact, although there is
plenty of meteorological research out there for reference, a wide swath of the
population clings to a number of weather myths that, although they sound
correct, just aren't true. Earlier this month, AccuWeather.com set out to put
some of these weather myths to bed by explaining some of the most widespread
and misinformed. Click through this week to earn fact from fiction.
Myth #5: Lightening doesn't strike the same
place twice
Of course it doesn't, right? There is so
much space out there for it to strike, why would lightening repeat? But it does, according to AccuWeather.
The Empire State Building gets struck repeatedly [on average of 100 times a year]. It all depends on how much an object sticks up in the sky.
The Empire State Building gets struck repeatedly [on average of 100 times a year]. It all depends on how much an object sticks up in the sky.




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