EPISODE · Jun 29, 2026 · 22 MIN
Raining Animals: The Centuries-Old Mystery of Fish Falling From the Sky
from pplpod
You step outside, feel a heavy wet drop on your head, look down expecting rain, and instead find a frog. Or a fish. Or even a jellyfish. It sounds like science fiction, but raining animals is a heavily documented phenomenon stretching back to antiquity.This episode unpacks the historical accounts, wild myths, and actual physics behind creatures falling from the sky. We trace the journey from medieval beliefs that fish spawned in clouds to modern Doppler radar evidence, examining why some cases have tidy explanations and others still baffle scientists entirely. It matters because it reveals how easily human perception confuses correlation with causation, and how much of nature remains unexplained.Ancient accounts include a three-day rain of fish in the Peloponnese documented by the Greek writer Athenaeus, and toads reported falling by French soldiers in 1794.Honduras's annual Lluvia de Peces and Singapore's 1861 walking catfish event show many cases are actually flooding rivers or migrating fish, not animals from the sky.The tornadic waterspout theory has major flaws, including no sorting mechanism for single-species falls and centrifugal force that would fling animals outward like a blender.The bird-drop theory explains modern cases like the 2021 Texarkana fall, where chewed-up fish matched cormorants regurgitating their catch, and San Francisco pelicans dropping anchovies in sunny weather.True outliers defy all theories, including 1894 jellyfish in Bath, England, the 1987 pink frogs across Gloucestershire, and a full marine ecosystem of octopuses and starfish in Qingdao in 2018.
NOW PLAYING
Raining Animals: The Centuries-Old Mystery of Fish Falling From the Sky
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
No similar episodes found.
Similar Podcasts
No similar podcasts found.