Back when I got my first muzzleloader cannon, a 10 gauge, I read about cannon ball climb. I thought it had to be a crock, so I went out to the range and tried it. firing unpatched steel ball bearings over thick cardboard wads, the ball climbed at least 10 feet over the bore line by the time they reached 100 yds. They were going over the back stop, even when the bore was pointed at the ground at the base of the back stop. I thought perhaps I had an off center bore and checked it all kinds of ways. Hearing those ball bearings ricocheting off tree trunks was something else too. I repeated it at least a dozen times after checking the bore. Even had spotters checking to make sure the balls were not hitting the ground and bouncing up. They definitely climbed.
And BTW, the trees were quite some distance beyond the back stop and from there, the back range went up a steep mountain. I definitely was not bouncing balls into the next county, housings developments etc.
I understand what you are saying Double d, but I did find a reference to a Magnus explanation of bullets deflecting above normal trajectory due to spin rotation and cross winds. Also. a bullet fired from a rifle spins on an axis that is parallel to the flight. A cannon ball fired from a smoothbore can spin on an axis that is perpendicular to the line of flight. Which creates two distinct aerodynamic effects.