You probably have to be 30-35+ to remember, it mostly happened in the 90s and prior. 100% self contained small pitch black storm clouds, and i mean BLACK, blacker than any storm you ever see in the modern era, often only like 10-20-30 feet in diameter, and very low altitude like only 200-300 feet in the sky, just moving along on its own, with an occasionally glimmer of electricity in it.shit got mandela effected out of existence with all the reality updates
>>42046508and unlike that photo, they could also appear while the rest of the sky is completely blue.
>>42046508You saw these? How often? Interested to hear more...Also the way you described it reminds me of a cartoon storm cloud, lol.
>>42046508i remember being taught by adults that they are natural phenomenon called a ball lightning? Never seen one myself
>>42046508I'm an older zoomie and I have two other climate/weather mandela effects that i've never heard of before. Firstly I remember "global warming" actually being "global cooling" and it was something to do with aerosols/accelerants freezing the atmosphere, causing another ice-age. Second one is even more stupid sounding, but I swear on my life that like "mini-tornadoes" were fairly common, frequently they would carry huge amounts of leaves in autumn. And I don't mean life regular wind I mean they were spiral like tornadoes and could lift you a few inches off the ground if you were a kid.These both sounds stupid as fuck but I'm not joking. I vividly remember these.
>>42047105about 4 times per year throughout the 90s on average. yeah they were basically cartoon storm clouds. makes you wonder if those cartoon storm clouds came from any basis in reality at the time.
>>42048571yeah those little tornados used to be much more common, i never see them anymore
>>42048605I was literally in detention as a kid, with a few others, because we kept running into them during outdoors / physical classes and disrupting everything. Like I said they would sort of strip off the leaves from many trees during autumn, to fairly awesome effect. I remember when I jumped into them, it was like an actual physical force sort of like slowed how fast you fell/pushed and pulled you, proper insane fantasy shit. It was only a few years ago I was randomly reminded of it, and I realized it doesn't even make sense physically. Then I did some research and found out nobody even talks about it.
Ball lightning. Natural phenomenon.>>42048571Not uncommon.
>>42048708based ragebaiter
Yes, "ball lightning" is a 100% natural mundane event, that:- is incredibly rare, even more rare to capture on video- scientists have no idea what the specific conditions are for it to appear- has never been replicated in a controlled lab setting- actually looks nothing like the OP pic (more like a glowing "orb" than a dark cloud)Nothing to see here folks! Just some good ol' fashioned ordinary "ball lightning".
>people calling it ball lightningBall lightning is a lightning orb with nothing else, no cloud around it. OP described a cloud with some lightning storming inside, this is different.
>>42046508Your image doesn't do it justice, but I used to be fascinated by those clouds too. Genuinelly surreal seing a clear blue sky with a single really dark, dense and compact cloud floating around. The ones I've seen didn't have visible lighting but I could occasionally hear thunder and it was spooky as hell.Haven't seen one in decades.>>42048571>Firstly I remember "global warming" actually being "global cooling" and it was something to do with aerosols/accelerants freezing the atmosphere, causing another ice-age. I'm not that old, but yes this used to be the "consensus" of the "scientific community" until the 70s I think. There're tons of maganines and newspaper articles and academic papers on this now outdated topic and its existence is one of the biggest counter-arguments against climate """"science"""".>mini-tornadosI'm not entirely sure what you mean, but I think they're still a thing.
>>42046508I have one of those fucking clouds hanging over my head all the time raining on me.>>42048571fluorocarbons in spray cans.the little tornados are cool. I've witnessed them before, but they had plastic bags floating all up in them.like 100 yards in the air spinning around in a vortex