How to Protect Your Home from Lightning
(Page 2 of 2)
June 5, 2008
By Troy Griepentrog
Understand Lightning
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When lightning hits the ground, a tree, a tower or even a building, it doesn’t go straight down but usually spreads along the ground first, so being near something that’s struck by lightning is almost as dangerous as being hit directly by lightning. And it can strike the same place twice: The Empire State Building is struck by lightning about 100 times each year. (It actually functions as a lightning rod for surrounding buildings.)
About 20 percent of people who are struck by lightning are killed instantly. The other 80 percent usually suffer from severe burns and other
complications. To learn how to protect yourself if you’re caught outside during a thunderstorm and can’t get indoors, read
How to Survive Lightning. And if you’ve ever wondered why thunder “rolls,” read
The Wonder of Thunder.
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