
via GearDiary.com
A strike of lightning left Winston Kemp, a 24-year-old electrician, with Lichtenberg figures, a skin discoloration.
It's a terrifying way to get a temporary tattoo. To get the feathery looking, fern-like pattern running down this man's left arm, he first needed to be struck by lightning.
Known as a "Lichtenberg figure," for the German physicist who first described seeing a similar pattern while experimenting with static electricity, these reddish fern-leaf patterns are a skin reaction to a lightning strike.
These dramatic "keraunographic" marks are sometimes referred to as "lightning flowers" or "lightning trees." They tend to occur on the arms, back, neck, chest, or shoulders of lightning strike victims.
As the tech blog Gear Diary reported, Winston Kemp earned this intricate body art during a spring storm when he went outside to save his pumpkins. Ironically, Kemp is an electrician, but it wasn't his job that put him in contact with this electrical jolt; it was a bolt from Mother Nature in his own backyard.
The 24-year-old says he saw something bright and heard something loud hit his neighbor's yard, but he didn't feel a thing.
"I just came back inside like nothing was wrong. Umm ... my arm was sore. But I didn't ... I don't think I saw any marks until 30, 45 ... [it was] maybe an hour before I saw the marks," he tells Gear Diary.
Kemp says it didn't hurt when it happened, but a few hours later his arm started to feel achy and sore. Big blisters started forming on his skin the next day, which his girlfriend, a pre-med student, carefully lanced and covered to prevent infection.
"The feathering marks are formed by the transmission of static electricity along the superficial blood vessels that nourish the skin," says Dr. Mathew Avram, director of the Dermatology Laser and Cosmetic Center at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.
"They're the kind of marks that when an emergency medicine doctor sees it, you know exactly what the diagnosis is -- a lightning strike," he explains.
"These are an unbelievably rare thing to see," adds Avram.
What you tend to see is a superficial burn to the top part of the skin, he says. If the person was wearing a belt buckle or the skin was sweating a lot during the lightning strike, the fern-leaf patterns may be deeper.
Although Kemp did not go to an emergency room, Avram said a trip to the ER is generally a good idea, so you don't get any secondary infections from the skin wounds.
Usually the red marks fade within hours of the lightning strike, though Kemp's lasted longer than that. It's a good idea to put an antibiotic ointment or Vaseline on the affected skin several times a day until they completely heal.
Even a month after the lightning strike, Kemp said he still felt "random pains" running down his left arm and the skin felt tender.
"That's not surprising," says Avram. "Any time there's an injury to the skin you can get nerve sensations afterward and the redness from a burn can last for months."
Related:
- Deadly bolts: Lightning survivors stress safety
- Irishman died of spontaneous combustion, coroner claims
- Harry Potter's headaches finally diagnosed
Want more weird health news? Find The Body Odd on Facebook.


Not suggesting anyone should be struck by lightning, but it is very pretty.
I was thinking the same thing. I don't have any art on my body, but that actually looks like something I'd consider for about 3 seconds before saying, "hmm, never mind."
I didn't know mother nature was a tattoo artist :)
This is too easy:
When it happened his buddy (quick as a flash) said:.... "That's gonna leave a mark"
Shockingly beautiful tattoo!
Lol Lisa. I think the same. It's really rather beautiful...doesn't mean I'm going to stand in the middle of a thunderstorm with a metal rod, but it is rather lovely.
I was going to say, before it fades, to commemorate the event, I'd have had a tattoo superimposed on it.
Looks pretty cool! A natural tatoo if there ever was one! Too bad that design didn't stay forever without any problems. What a great conversation starter to pick up women!! "How would you like to see my lightning strike?" heheh!
i dont have any tats, but if that happened to me i would get the pattern tatted in as soon as possible- mother nature still produces the best artwork.
Any lightning strike you do not feel is a good lightning strike! The lightning did produce an awesome looking pattern but its sobering when you think that it took a million volts to get.
The least the lightning could do is make the markings permanent, I mean how cool would that kind of a tattoo be!?
I love how one of the related links is indeed harry potter.... lol
He just might be superhuman now. Electo~boy! or Shazam....Bolt~Man...Blazo...! Cool.
By the way, electricians' trade nickname is "Sparky".
Pre-Med Student....not even a med student..practicing without a medical licenses anyone?
Hahaha, you're so funny.
If treating superficial skin wounds and blisters to keep them from getting infected is "practicing without a license" you're going to have to fine every mom in the nation.
Aspiring Ambulance-chaser? How about "girlfriend" taking care of her man? Every time you take an asprin for a headache you're essentially "practicing medicine without a license". Every band-aid, every swab with neo-sporin... we're all guilty.
I'm not a real Doctor, but I play one on newsvine.com ...
Whats truly amazing to me is that the pattern of the mark itself resembles a lightning bolt. Mandelbrot was right, fractals everywhere you look in nature.
Wow.
I suppose that IGNORANCE is bliss----right Ryan? Applying basic first aid to a family member does not constitute practicing medicine without a license!
Ignorance is bliss---right Ryan? To provide basic first aid to a family member does not constitute practicing medicine-think about that the next time you use some antibiotic ointment and a band aid.!
I love playing the video game Infamous, and I wish I had Cole's powers but seeing this well...I'll reconsider.
so pretty! ironically it looks like his bed cover O.O
When I first saw the headline, I was imagining I was going to open this page and see an arm blown to chit! Big o'le slice with burnt-steak like meat along the edges, oozing puss 'n gore---you know, kinda like that, lol!
And, how many people who get hit by lightning actually survive? 1/1000? 1/10000? I know the # isn't very high!
What about the noise associated with a lightning strike? Superheated air from the bolt expands creating thunder which is heard miles from the strike so how does it not affect your hearing too?