skywizard
13th October 2013, 12:35
http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2013/10/07/14/25/vZz6x.Em.138.jpeg
Francis Preston Venable, professor at UNC, examined
samples from the blood rain reported in Chatham County in 1884.
Fortean events involving strange things raining down from the skies have been reported for centuries.
In 1884 on a day with clear skies over rural Chatham County, sharecropper Bass Lasater witnessed a deluge unlike anything she'd ever seen. Drops of liquid started to fall from the sky that, far from being the usual cool raindrops that typically water her crops, took the form of large spots of blood that doused an area of approximately one tenth of an acre in a strange red sheen.
Word of the event very quickly spread across the county and gained widespread attention after being published in local newspapers. Upon hearing about the incident, chemist Professor Francis P. Venable decided to conduct his own investigation and headed out to take a closer look.
Venable took samples of the red substance from areas where it had dried in to the sand and took it away for analysis. Examining the samples with a microscope and spectroscope he concluded that the substance was indeed blood, but that he could not explain how it had come to be there.
"As to theories accounting for so singular a material falling from a cloudless sky, I have no plausible ones to offer," he wrote. "I have deemed this strange matter worthy of being placed on record."
Source: http://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/news/256009/legends-revisited--the-day-it-rained-blood
Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2013/10/07/4372012/mystery-from-1884-the-day-it-rained.html#.UlqN2Sr5w6-
peace...
skywizard
Francis Preston Venable, professor at UNC, examined
samples from the blood rain reported in Chatham County in 1884.
Fortean events involving strange things raining down from the skies have been reported for centuries.
In 1884 on a day with clear skies over rural Chatham County, sharecropper Bass Lasater witnessed a deluge unlike anything she'd ever seen. Drops of liquid started to fall from the sky that, far from being the usual cool raindrops that typically water her crops, took the form of large spots of blood that doused an area of approximately one tenth of an acre in a strange red sheen.
Word of the event very quickly spread across the county and gained widespread attention after being published in local newspapers. Upon hearing about the incident, chemist Professor Francis P. Venable decided to conduct his own investigation and headed out to take a closer look.
Venable took samples of the red substance from areas where it had dried in to the sand and took it away for analysis. Examining the samples with a microscope and spectroscope he concluded that the substance was indeed blood, but that he could not explain how it had come to be there.
"As to theories accounting for so singular a material falling from a cloudless sky, I have no plausible ones to offer," he wrote. "I have deemed this strange matter worthy of being placed on record."
Source: http://www.unexplained-mysteries.com/news/256009/legends-revisited--the-day-it-rained-blood
Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2013/10/07/4372012/mystery-from-1884-the-day-it-rained.html#.UlqN2Sr5w6-
peace...
skywizard