Ecology

This Incredible Video Will Change the Way You See the Rain Forever

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Image from Flickr user Oleg Shpyrko

I have always loved the smell of rain.

Though I’ve never quite been a “splashing through mud puddles” kind of girl, give me a good walk just after a storm and I’ll be smiling.  Everything smells fresh, as though the problems that have plagued the world since the last shower have been washed away.

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Image from Flickr user Jeff W. Spencer

But why does this happen?  Where does this scent come from?  Water has no smell, so it’s not the rain itself that creates this sense of clean euphoria.

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Image from Flickr user Nana B Agyei

Scientists have studied this phenomenon, and even named it—petrichor—but it wasn’t until recently that we were able to see it for precisely what it was.  The smell that we all love isn’t actually from the rain–instead, it comes from the ground itself.

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Image from Flickr user Qasim Massey

As we can see in a slowed-down, close-up video from MIT, when a raindrop hits just the right sort of soil at just the right speed, it carries tiny bubbles up into the air, releasing the smell of the soil.  The whole process is explained in this awesome New York Times video below.

So breathe deep, Eco-Chickies—when you’re smelling the rain, you’re smelling the world all around you!

 

Sophie Hessekiel is a writer, comedian, and occasional musician who has fled Westchester to pursue feminism, fashion, ecology and comedy in the far-flung fields of Poughkeepsie and Manhattan. When not interning at Eco-Chick, she is writing and performing with her sketch group at Vassar or deconstructing Taylor Swift and Tinder with her gal pals. She also interns for Wifey.tv and is always on the lookout for great new video content. Sophie is studying English, Film, and Español at Vassar, and she wants to make television when she grows up—or, you know, now. Whichever comes first.