Researchers once believed only meteorites could do so. At a rock outcropping in southern France, a jagged fracture runs along the granite. The surface in and around the crevice is discolored black, as if wet or covered in algae. But the real explanation for the rock’s unusual features is more dramatic: a powerful bolt of lightning.
Using extremely high-resolution microscopy, Prof Gieré et al found that not only had the lightning melted the rock’s surface, resulting in a distinctive black “glaze,” but had transferred enough pressure to deform a thin layer of quartz crystals beneath the surface, resulting in distinct atomic-level structures called shock lamellae...
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