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How?

2007-03-03 15:59:01 · 4 answers · asked by T 2 in Science & Mathematics Zoology

4 answers

It's actually not a totally rare occurrence. The most recent was in 1997 in a small town in Mexico. In 1844 people in England actually went out holding coats and buckets to try to catch dozens of falling frogs. How?

In each case a small tornado or water spout pulled the frogs out of a pond and lifted them up through the funnel. In time, they fell back to earth as if from rain. Fish, snails, and grasshoppers have also been known to "rain down" through similar events.

2007-03-03 16:13:15 · answer #1 · answered by SA Writer 6 · 0 0

several times some times dessert ponds get evaporated very fast ,after the rare dessert rains (maybe twice in a century)and these waters contain tadpoles and fish

about 2 kilometers high is a layer of air that has all kinds of strange things in it, insects, seeds and the tadpoles.

things can remain in this layer for some time and the develloped frogs can rain down somewhere else

read Lyall Watsons book .Heavens Breath it has a lot of strange happenings and facts about the winds and air
his 2 books called Super Nature are also fascinating.

2007-03-04 02:08:49 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I remember a hurricaine or a typhoon hit land where frogs or toads numbered in the thousands. It picked them up and as it disipated over the land farther down it rained frogs

2007-03-04 00:14:04 · answer #3 · answered by RICH H 1 · 0 0

Not just once, but a number of times. And not just frogs!

This gives places, dates, and species:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raining_animals

2007-03-04 00:15:52 · answer #4 · answered by copperhead 7 · 0 0

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