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Ball lightning
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=== Wilfrid de Fonvielle === In his book ''Thunder and Lightning'',<ref>{{cite book|last= de Fonvielle|first= Wilfrid | translator1-last = Phipson | translator1-first = T. L. |title= Thunder and lightning (full text)|year= 1875|pages= 32β39|chapter= Chapter X Globular lightning|isbn= 978-1-142-61255-9 |chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=hukDAAAAQAAJ}}</ref> translated into English in 1875, French science-writer [[Wilfrid de Fonvielle]] wrote that there had been about 150 reports of globular lightning: <blockquote>Globular lightning seems to be particularly attracted to metals; thus it will seek the railings of balconies, or else water or gas pipes etc., It has no peculiar tint of its own but will appear of any colour as the case may be ... at [[Coethen]] in the Duchy of Anhalt it appeared green. M. Colon, Vice-President of the Geological Society of Paris, saw a ball of lightning descend slowly from the sky along the bark of a poplar tree; as soon as it touched the earth it bounced up again, and disappeared without exploding. On 10th of September 1845 a ball of lightning entered the kitchen of a house in the village of [[Salagnac]] in the valley of [[Correze]]. This ball rolled across without doing any harm to two women and a young man who were here; but on getting into an adjoining stable it exploded and killed a pig which happened to be shut up there, and which, knowing nothing about the wonders of thunder and lightning, dared to smell it in the most rude and unbecoming manner. The motion of such balls is far from being very rapid β they have even been observed occasionally to pause in their course, but they are not the less destructive for all that. A ball of lightning which entered the church of Stralsund, on exploding, projected a number of balls which exploded in their turn like shells.<ref>{{cite news |title= Globular lightning|last= Anon|date= 24 December 1867|work= The Leeds Mercury|location= Leeds, UK}}</ref></blockquote>
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