It’s been a warm day, maybe even a little humid, and the tall clouds in the distance remind you of cauliflower. You hear a sharp crack, like the sound of a batter hitting a home run, or a low rumble ...
PHOENIX (3TV/CBS 5) - Lightning is an Arizona summertime tradition. It’s not a question of if but when it’ll happen. A nationwide network has set up cameras in five states, including Arizona, to track ...
Lightning during one of Arizona’s powerful monsoon storms can be beautiful to look at but, on average, two people a year die in Arizona from lightning. In an effort to try to track this weather ...
The National Lightning Detection Network counted all of the lightning flashes and strikes across our Michigan sky last Thursday and Friday. You won’t believe how many lightning events we had in just ...
It’s been a warm day, maybe even a little humid, and the tall clouds in the distance remind you of cauliflower. You hear a sharp crack, like the sound of a batter hitting a home run, or a low rumble ...
LOUISVILLE, Colo. — Most wildfires are caused by humans, and when there are humans around to start them, that usually means there are also humans close by to put them out. Lightning is only to blame ...
LOUISVILLE, Colo. — After a slow start to thunderstorm season in Colorado, nearly 290,000 lightning flashes were recorded June 3-7. The National Lightning Detection Network, operated out of Louisville ...
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — Severe weather was a story for many nationally last year. A newly released report by the Vaisala U.S. National Lightning Detection Network tallied all of the lightning strikes ...
Whenever Florida State University meteorology professor Henry Fuelberg is at home and there’s a thunderstorm, he likes to sit in a rocking chair on his covered front porch, watching the lightning and ...
When lightning splits off like this, there's a chance it will strike the ground in multiple places. Credit: Felix Mittermeier/Unsplash Although the likelihood of a human being hit by lightning is ...
There isn't a lightning bolt within 100 miles of Houston that can get past Texas A&M professor Richard Orville. And he never walks his dog without knowing when and where lighting could strike. On June ...