Ripley's Believe It or Not by Ripley’s Believe It or Not! for July 30, 2019

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    Templo S.U.D.  over 5 years ago

    Where was the last recorded 1.3 billion-volt thunderstorm?

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    Bilan  over 5 years ago

    Aren’t all of the shrimp’s organs in the head? The part we eat seems to be just meat and a poison vein.

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    MosheWaisberg  over 5 years ago

    1.21 gigawatts!

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    therese_callahan2002  over 5 years ago

    “But I put my heart above my head—” Neil Diamond.

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    therese_callahan2002  over 5 years ago

    Did Ben Franklin think of that when he flew a kite?

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    Gent  over 5 years ago

    So where’s his brains located?

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    Gent  over 5 years ago

    Just hope big foot doesn’t eat it thinking it’s a giant potato.

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    Gent  over 5 years ago

    What sort of a humongous voltmeter did they measure that from?

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    well-i-never  over 5 years ago

    Looks like a hundred million volts would be just about right to bake that tater.

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    fujiman  over 5 years ago

    It would appear that the way to a shrimp’s heart is NOT through it’s stomach.

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    Dean  over 5 years ago

    As in most things electrical, the uninformed are usually more impressed with voltage, while it is the current that is more significant.

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    Radish...   over 5 years ago

    Why can’t we draw our electricity from the earth’s electric field?

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    edeevans1947  over 5 years ago

    That’s good about the shrimp heart being in it’s head because shrimp heart doesn’t taste very good!

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    h.v.greenman  over 5 years ago

    Is that voltage what was measured in the duration of the storm or in a single strike of lightning?

    If so than this little tidbit from The Union of Advancement of Science and Art, is way off: https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-voltage-and-amperage-of-an-average-lightning-bolt

    “A typical lightning bolt contains 1 billion volts and contains between 10,000 to 200,000 amperes of current. The average flash would light a 100 watt lightbulb for 3 months. A typical lightning bolt contains 1 billion volts and contains between 10,000 to 200,000 amperes of current.”

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    Petemejia77  over 5 years ago

    That’s more than what McFly needs!

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    Huckleberry Hiroshima  over 5 years ago

    Well I’ll be. Idaho of all places.

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    Physicsfreak  over 5 years ago

    Want to make yourself a billionaire? Figure a way to siphon off a part of the electrical charge as a lighting bolt hits a lighting rod into a storage battery then make it useful to a home, community or national electrical grid.

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    craigwestlake  over 5 years ago

    Interesting; most young people have their hearts located in their…

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  19. Spock
    Spock  over 5 years ago

    It’s not “electrical potential”, but “difference of electrical potentials”.

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    The Pro from Dover  over 5 years ago

    Poor Shrimpy. He meets girls but always wears his heart in his head.

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