Lightning never strikes twice in the same place.
Lightning

Flashcard
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Professional Development
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Professional Development
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Hard
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10 questions
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1.
FLASHCARD QUESTION
Front
Back
False
Answer explanation
Lightning often strikes the same place repeatedly, especially if it’s a tall, pointy, isolated object. The Empire State Building was once used as a lightning laboratory because it is hit nearly 25 times per year, and has been known to have been hit up to a dozen times during a single storm.
2.
FLASHCARD QUESTION
Front
Lightning only strikes the tallest objects.
Back
False
Answer explanation
Lightning is indiscriminate and it can find you anywhere. Lightning may hit the ground instead of a tree, cars instead of nearby telephone poles, and parking lots instead of buildings.
3.
FLASHCARD QUESTION
Front
If you're stuck in a thunderstorm, being under a tree is better than no shelter at all.
Back
False
Answer explanation
Sheltering under a tree is just about the worst thing you can do. If lightning does hit the tree, there’s the chance that a “ground charge” will spread out from the tree in all directions. Being underneath a tree is the second leading cause of lightning casualties.
4.
FLASHCARD QUESTION
Front
If you don't see rain or clouds, you're safe from lightning.
Back
False
Answer explanation
Lightning often strikes more than three miles from the thunderstorm, far outside the rain or even the thunderstorm cloud. Though infrequent, “bolts from the blue” have been known to strike areas as distant as 10 miles from their thunderstorm origins, where the skies appear clear.
5.
FLASHCARD QUESTION
Front
A car's rubber tires will protect you from lightning
Back
True
Answer explanation
True, being in a car will likely protect you. But most vehicles are actually safe because the metal roof and sides divert lightning around you—the rubber tires have little to do with keeping you safe. Convertibles, motorcycles, bikes, open-shelled outdoor recreation vehicles and cars with plastic or fiberglass shells offer no lightning protection at all.
6.
FLASHCARD QUESTION
Front
You are safer if you lie flat on the ground during a lightning storm.
Back
False
Answer explanation
Lying flat on the ground makes you more vulnerable to electrocution, not less. Lightning generates potentially deadly electrical currents along the ground in all directions—by lying down, you're providing more potential points on your body to hit.
7.
FLASHCARD QUESTION
Front
If you touch a lightning victim, you'll be electrocuted.
Back
False
Answer explanation
The human body doesn’t store electricity. It is perfectly safe to touch a lightning victim to give them first aid.
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