tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1654453000595709183.post1564794734483682744..comments2023-08-24T19:13:32.279-04:00Comments on My Crazy Email: Oil Rig TornadoDennishttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08219420837230045294noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1654453000595709183.post-70332768956395470602012-06-22T13:47:38.910-04:002012-06-22T13:47:38.910-04:00Thanks Robert, neat picture. Too bad it's not ...Thanks Robert, neat picture. Too bad it's not real :-(. <br />http://www.hoax-slayer.com/oil-rig-tornado-photo.shtml<br />According to this message, an attached image is a photograph of a large tornado about to engulf an oil rig in Texas. A massive lightning strike illuminates the scene. The image is certainly a spectacular one. However, it is not a genuine photograph. Instead, the image consists of two or more other photographs cleverly joined together using image manipulation software such as Photoshop. The perpetrator of the hoax image has merged a photograph of an unidentified oil rig at night with a well known tornado image that has circulated on the Internet for several years. The tornado and lightning portion of the image was taken by Fred Smith over Lake Okeechobee, Florida in the early 1990's. The original, unaltered tornado photograph has been posted on accuweather.com and many other places on the Internet.<br /><br />The tornado photograph has also circulated via email, blogs and forums without the added oil rig portion. It is often accompanied by inaccurate descriptions that falsely locate the twister to other places and times, including Pisgah, Alabama in 2008, Sedalia, Missouri in 2006 and The Villages, Florida in 2007.Dennishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08219420837230045294noreply@blogger.com