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Rain facts

How heavy is rain?

A total of 500,000 tonnes of rain can fall from a single thunderstorm.
That's the same as nearly 65,000 London buses!

In one second a total of 16 million tonnes falls in rain, hail or snow.

anvil thunder cloud
falling bus image

How much energy does rain have?

The average thunderstorm can release as much energy as a one megaton bomb!

Some people find storms so interesting that they "chase" them, following storms as they pass through. They are known as "storm chasers". In a storm, clouds can reach a towering 20 kilometres tall!

What is the driest place on earth?

The Atacama desert in Chile has so little rain that it is hard to measure it. In fact parts of the desert have not seen a single drop of rain since records began. Although it is a desert people and animals still live there. One reason it is so dry is that it is in a rain shadow

parched earth
chac

 

Rain Gods

Chac was the god of rain for the Mayans. He was a benevolent god for the Mayans who often sought his help for their crops. Chac was associated with creation and life. Chac was also considered to be divided into four equal entities. Each division represented the North, South, East, and West.

Snow or rain?

For every inch of rain that falls, the equivalent in snow would be 10 inches.

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The wettest place on Earth
flooded road
There is a lot of dispute about the wettest place in the world. Here are the contenders

1. Mount Wai-'ale-'ale, Kauai

This is one of the Hawaiian islands - the weather station here is 1569 metres high and records on average 11,684mm to 13,000mm rain per year. Rain falls on between 335 and 360 days per year

2. Mount Tutenendo, Colombia

This records 11,770mm to 12,045mm rain per year, again depending on which source you choose to believe and there's just 275mm difference between sources.

3. Lloro, Colombia

Estimated 13,299mm rain per year. According to The National Climatic Data Center this is an estimated amount and in fact Quibdo in Colombia, which is at a lower altitude than Lloro, is with an average annual rainfall of 8,991.6mm rain South America's wettest place.

4. Cherrapunji,north-eastern India

This was thought for many years to be the wettest place in the world. Here 10,820mm rain falls on average in a year, well short of the amounts that fall at the other contenders. Unlike Hawaii and Columbia where the rain falls throughout the whole year, Cherrapunji gets most of its rain during the 'south-west monsoon', or wet season, between June and August.

5. Mawsynram, India

Is quoted by the American National Climatic Data Center as having an annual average rainfall of 11,871mm and 11,877mm by BBC Weather, more than any other contender except Lloro in Colombia. Mawsynram is just a few kilometres away from Cherrapunji.

The Decision

The more sources you look at, the more quoted rainfall amounts differ. So lets say for now that Mount Wai-'ale-'ale, a couple of spots in the Colombian Highlands and one or two parts of India are the wettest places in the world. It really depends on measurement practice and procedures and the period being measured

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