Friday, September 9, 2016

Lightning Strike

More than 320 wild reindeer have been found dead after a single lightning strike struck a mountain plateau in southern Norway, local officials say, making it deadliest lightning strike ever recorded. 
The incident is believed to have happened on Friday afternoon when thunderstorms hit Hardangervidda National Park, which is located in southern Norway and is a popular destination for tourists, featuring one of the country's largest glaciers.

The incident was first reported on Friday evening after a hunting supervisor found the group of dead reindeer on the Hardangervidda mountain plateau, but it took until Sunday before officials could visit the site to assess the situation.

"Our people in the field have found 323 dead reindeer, of which 5 had to be put down due to injuries," said Elin Fosshaug Olsø, a spokeswoman for the Norwegian Environment Agency. All of the dead reindeer were found in a radius of just 50 meters (165 feet).

"We believe all reindeer were killed as a result of one single powerful lightning strike, because of the way they were positioned," Olsø explained. "We have never experienced such a large number of reindeer killed by lightning at the same time before. This is as far as we know a unique incident."

Lightning strikes are at times capable of killing groups of animals if they are gathered tightly together, but Friday's incident in Norway involved a remarkably high number of dead animals, believed to be the highest number ever recorded.


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