Multiple lightning bolts reflect on the ocean waters during a summer monsoon storm in Rocky Point, Puerto Penasco, Mexico
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Contributor:
JEFF SMITH / Alamy Stock PhotoImage ID:
APJC8BFile size:
107.5 MB (3 MB Compressed download)Releases:
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6265 x 6000 px | 53 x 50.8 cm | 20.9 x 20 inches | 300dpiLocation:
Rocky Point, MexicoMore information:
Lightning strikies over the Sea of cortez in Puerto Penasco, Sonora, Mexico illuminating and stopping the motion of the sea. Lightning bolts illuminate the night with flashes that contrast dramatically against a black stormy sky and glowing ocean waters. The silhouette of the ocean and beach is accentuated by the intertwined dance of the lightning streaming down from the clouds during this desert monsoon storm in Rocky Point, Mexico. Mother Nature puts on a show of light that can be considered an act of God. Electrical currents from lightning bolts travel from the earth to the sky through invisible pathways that trickle down from the storm clouds above. Once one of these invisible pathways makes contact with the charge building in the ground, the invisible pathways are lit up with the energy flowing back to the cloud from the ground. These summer storms are called Monsoon because of the southerly winds bringing moisture up from the mountains in Mexico This moisture interacts with the mountains in the Arizona desert and summer temperature over 100 degrees. These conditions are prime for developing intense thunderstorms. The powerful force of these storms can be frightening and thrilling. These conditions exist during the "Monsoon Season" in the desert southwest generally from early July to late August and early September. These rains are what rejuvenate the dry desert and keep it a living, green desert. Some other lightning storms occur in the desert with the El Nino and La Nina systems. Also search Jeff Smith and Lightningsmiths for my other weather related images.