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Apocalypse on Lake Texoma
This story was sent in by Beb E who one May about four decades ago saw a
cake of sodium about 5" x 3" x 1.5" (about 360 grams, or 3/4 pound)
thrown into lake Texoma.
It was just there in a jar of kerosine....
Sodium wants the OH radical
from H2O, leaving a free H. And the heat generated in the process
ignites all that free hydrogen.
That spring night the wind was a steady 25mph or so. I was concerned
that
maybe it would blow away the hydrogen before it could begin to burn.
Tossed the cake about 25 feet out in the lake. After about 30 seconds it
lit with a roar and the flame stood straight up about 12 feet high,
wasn't even leaned over by the wind at all! It was very loud like a
blowtorch, we turned and ran a step or two away, then it blew. The earth
moved! I have never since felt the ground move.
I turned back to see this semicircle of fire and explosions on the water
about 150 feet either side of us. Some the size of cherry bombs, many as
small as a cap pistol, and everything in between. This went on for
several minutes and we all thought it was over.
About half a mile out and to our right another explosion occurred. We
were shocked! The main part of the cake was intact. When the 1st
explosion slammed down on the water it must have propelled the cake 5 or
10 thousand feet in the air. Being of quick wit? We said, "Where will it
land this time?" Our semicircle is still burning and popping and now
half
a mile away is a complete circle going crazy too! Wow.
A few more minutes and the next explosion happened only about a quarter
of a mile away and a little to our left. Another circle of fire and
explosions on the lake. We watched it hop several more times, then we
became worried someone would come to see what in the world was going on.
So we left still going, "Oh and Aww."
Sodium on the skin will go after your water as it is converting it's
self
to NaOH (lye). Hot lye is not a good thing to be in contact with! Not
one
of us was hit with a piece of sodium from that earth moving explosion
only 30 feet away! To this day I don't know how we were so lucky.
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