Tree burns inside out after being set ablaze by 50,000f lightning
Tree burns from inside out after being struck by 50,000F lightning bolt in Ohio and set ablaze
- Glowing red hot flames spiraled up the trunk as the rest of the tree’s branches and leaved remained healthy and unaffected by the smoldering fire
- Lightning bolts have a temperature of 50,000F – 10 times hotter than the surface of the sun
- Firefighters from Ridgeville Township responded to the burning tree that is located on a parcel of land, near a barn, storage unit, with a corn field nearby
- A tree service company was called in to help ensure that all the flames were extinguished
- Trees are said to be natural lightning rods, as their sap serves as a conductor Purdue University experts explain
A massive tree in Ohio struck by a lightning bolt looked sinister as it burned from the inside out as glowing red hot flames spiraled up the trunk.
Lightning bolts have a temperature of 50,000f, meaning the tree was set ablaze with flames that will have initially been 10 times hotter than the surface of the sun.
The blaze started early Tuesday morning as severe storms moved through the area of rural Ridgeville Township, Ohio located about 45 miles southwest of Toledo, that brought damaging winds and heavy rainfall to the area.
Firefighters from Ridgeville Township responded to the burning tree that is located on a large parcel of land, near a barn and a storage unit, with a corn field nearby.
As flames moved along the tree’s interior trunk as the outer branches and rest of the tree’s branches and leaves remained healthy and unaffected.
The surrounding property was untouched by the fire as well.
The mysterious tree fire started early Tuesday morning as severe storms moved through the area of rural Ridgeville Township, located about 45 miles southwest of Toledo
A second video of the burning tree showed just how how its insides were
Firefighters from Ridgeville Township responded to the burning tree that is located on a large parcel of land, near a barn and a storage unit, with a corn field nearby
A close-up of some of the damage the tree incurred after firefighters extinguished the flames
‘Lightening can do some crazy things,’ the fire department wrote on their Facebook page sharing the haunting images.
Fire officials said that they had ‘a tough time getting to every hot spot in this tree trunk,’ and called in a tree service to ensure all the flames were destroyed.
Purdue University experts offered an explanation to why this natural phenomenon occurred, which is due in part, to trees serving as natural lightning rods, as their sap serves as a conductor.
The way they also grow in rings means their insides are composed of layers which can catch fire and burn from within, while the outside initially appears stable.
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