A 20-month-old girl died after being hit by a hailstone during a violent storm that wreaked havoc in the Catalonia region of northeastern Spain on Wednesday, according to authorities.
The toddler was rushed to the Josep Trueta Hospital in the nearby city of Girona but died overnight from her injuries, the hospital said in a statement, according to CBS News.
According to Catalonia’s meteorological service, hailstones nearly 4 inches (10 cm) in diameter, or the size of a softball, rained down in the village of La Bisbal d’Emporda, which is north of Barcelona, on Tuesday afternoon.
A person shows hailstones after a hailstorm in La Bisbal d’Emporda, Catalonia, Spain, in this screen grab taken from a social media video on Aug. 30, 2022. Twitter/@ignasicorney/via REUTERS |
“The hail only fell for 10 minutes, but it was 10 minutes of terror,” Carme Vall, a city councilor in La Bisbal d’Emporda, told radio RAC1, the BBC reported.
At least 50 other injuries — from bruises to bone fractures — were reported from the ferocious storm.
Across La Bisbal d’Emporda, windows were shattered, cars were dented and roofs were destroyed by the powerful force of the massive hailstones, which were the largest on record to ever fall in the town. According to the meteorological service, the last time a hailstone close to this size fell in the area was in 2002.
Front windshield of car shattered after a hailstorm in Spain on Aug. 30. (Pere Mauny via Storyful) |
“There was chaos, with little boys and girls running around alone; some parents were able to grab their children,” musician Sicus Carbonell told Reuters.
Carbonell and his band were playing under a canvas-covered terrace when the hailstorm started.
“A hailstone broke through the fabric…and I told my group that either we get into the restaurant or one of those tennis balls would land on us and we wouldn’t make it,” Carbonell said.
The meteorological service explained that hailstorms occur throughout the year but are more common between March and September.
Back windshield of car shattered after a hailstorm in Spain on Aug. 30. (Pere Mauny via Storyful) |
“This summer, hailstones have been common since the end of July and during the month of August,” the meteorological service wrote in a press release.
The meteorological service explained that the scorching temperatures this summer across Europe have resulted in higher-than-average water temperatures in the Mediterranean Sea, which have fueled storms with ample amounts of moisture and instability.
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