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_ Clouds

Top 10 questions  

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 Cause of  lightning

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 Where lightning hits

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10  Orange night skies

Current Column:  A saintly light

st elmo's fire

Why would a lightning-struck tree glow after being hit? It is not on fire and does not give off heat, but glows. 

It was a dark and stormy night.  Chris emails he was walking in the woods  "a little after a thunderstorm" when he noticed the tree.  The tree, shattered by an earlier lightning stroke, stabbed the night like a broken pike.  An eerie glow extended ... Click to continue

Lightning strikes giraffes

[Corel] Lightning can strike the tallest animalQ: Do giraffes get struck by lightning? Amy, Phoenix, AZ

Lightning can strike the tallest animal.  Photo courtesy of Corel Corporation.

A: Yes, they do, especially in lands where frequent thunderstorms visit. A game reserve in South Africa is such a spot. Unusually high concentrations of dolomite rock draw 15 lightning strikes a month. In 1996, lightning struck and killed an 18-foot tall giraffe (5.5 m). He was standing on a hill in the Rhino and Lion Reserve in northeastern South Africa. A year later lightning electrocuted his mate. Shortly afterwards, lightning struck and injured a young giraffe in the park. Consequently, the reserve sold its last giraffe in 1998 and turned down more.

"I refused the last offer point blank, primarily because this is not giraffe country, but also because of the lightning problem. There is absolutely nothing we can do to protect giraffes," Kelly Pera, reserve manager told the South African Sunday Times.

Giraffes do nothing to protect themselves either, says Spook Skeleton, wildlife photographer.

Lightning did not strike other reserve animals, not even the 6-foot tall white rhino. However, the giraffe is much taller and the reserve has few tall trees. So, giraffes are vulnerable because of their height.

We humans know better than to stand on a hill in the middle of a thunderstorm and be the tallest thing around. But the poor giraffe probably didn't. So, behavior can increase the odds of a giraffe being hit. Probably the biggest factors, though, are geography and climate.

Wild giraffes presently range across the dry savannah and semi-desert south of Africa's Sahara--wherever trees grow. That must be a saving grace. In its natural home, the giraffe is not the tallest thing around. Trees are. What's more that region sees few lightning strikes (less than one cloud-to- ground flash per square kilometer per year), says Hugh Christian, Chief Scientist for NASA's satellite lightning detection system, which covers Earth.

Further Surfing:

GIRAFFE, Giraffa camelopardalis photography and facts

NOAA: Interesting facts, myths, trivia about lightning

Planet Ark: Brasilia zoo shows off latest member of giraffe family

(Answered Jan. 31, 2003 updated on 25 July 2007)

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