Abstract
WE constantly find allusions in ancient classical authors, to lightning and thunder occurring in a clear sky. The former is often explained as referring to the phenomenon commonly known as “summer lightning”, or the reflection in the sky of lightning from clouds below the horizon, which becomes visible at night. I have also seen it stated that in the calm and clear atmosphere of Italy, thunder might be audible under similar conditions. These explanations, however, do not meet the case as stated by good observers amongst the ancients themselves. They do not explain, for instance, what is stated by Cicero amongst the portents which preceded the conspiracy of Catiline—“that a Roman citizen was killed by lightning on a cloudless day”. Pliny also mentions this case, adding that it happened at Pompeii. If such a phenomenon as lightning, falling from a cloudless sky, is disbelieved by men of science, may not the circumstance stated above be explained by supposing the man to have been killed by the fall of an aërolite? Humboldt, in his Kosmos, mentions two such instances.
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
D., C. Lightning in a Clear Sky. Nature 1, 139–140 (1869). https://doi.org/10.1038/001139c0
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/001139c0
- Springer Nature Limited