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This Is What Getting Struck By Lightning Looks Like

Lightning_Strike_1
I don't know about you, but I always thought that getting hit by a lightning bolt was something that only happened to cartoon characters, guest stars on network medical dramas, or those who happened to find themselves in an open field during a major weather event. Of course, lightning-related fatality and trauma are very real, and according to National Geographic, your chances of being struck by lightning at some point in your life are about one in 3,000.
What really happens when lightning strikes? As Gizmodo notes, our bodies are great conductors of electricity. If you're unlucky enough to catch the tail end of a bolt, you'll likely get a pretty nasty burn at the contact site and at the bolt's exit point — yes, just like a bullet, lightning goes into your body and back out again. Plus, 300kV of electricity will be flowing through your body, so if you happen to be wearing any metal objects or are wet (either with rain or sweat), your wounds will probably be more severe. In addition, the current can wreak havoc on your heart's natural pace, sometimes resulting in arrhythmia or cardiac arrest.
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winston-kemp-struck-by-lightning-525x700Photo: Courtesy Of Winston Kemp/Gear Diary.
In some cases, a lightning strike can also result in something kind of beautiful. The photo above was sent to Gear Diary by Texas resident Winston Kemp, who was struck by lightning after he "went outside to save his pumpkins" during a storm. Kemp didn't feel anything until about an hour later, when slight tingling led him to examine his left arm, which was covered with a strange, leafy cluster of burns.
According to IFLScience, Kemp's wounds take the form of a Lichtenberg figure, a phenomenon discovered by German physicist Georg Lichtenberg in 1777. Of course, Lichtenberg's research involved dust settling on electrically charged metal plates, not human flesh — but as IFLScience points out, the high-intensity static electricity of a lightning strike is capable of producing similar patterns in both materials.
Kemp reports that the burns faded within a few weeks, leaving only very faint marks to serve as evidence in what will undoubtedly be a great many retellings of this story to friends, family, and those prized pumpkins.

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