48
/ 100
Mixed
The text claims that after hurricanes, it sometimes rains snakes, frogs, and other small creatures.
Infact verdict: Mixed (48/100).
The claim that it rains animals like snakes and frogs after hurricanes is based on a misunderstanding. While it doesn't literally rain these animals, strong winds from hurricanes can displace them, causing them to appear in unusual places. This phenomenon is documented but is not the same as actual rainfall of animals. The evidence from the Library of Congress and Wikipedia supports this explanation, indicating that while animals can be lifted and moved by strong winds, they do not fall from the sky like rain.
How is this score determined? →Individual claims
48
Mixed
Other
After hurricanes, it sometimes rains snakes, frogs, and other small creatures.
The claim is misleading. It doesn't literally rain animals, but strong winds from hurricanes can displace them, causing them to appear in unexpected places. This is supported by evidence from the Library of Congress and Wikipedia, which explain that animals can be lifted by strong winds but do not fall from the sky like rain.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
50
Web Consensus Weight
40
Source Quality Score
40
Source Quality Weight
20
Llm Reasoning Score
50
Llm Reasoning Weight
40
Llm Reasoning Score Raw
50
Weighted Total
48
Evidence Summary
Web evidence explains displacement by strong winds, not literal rainfall of animals.