Created by Sanika Kale
over 5 years ago
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Question | Answer |
Cirrus | Thin, wispy, feather-like clouds. Made of ice crystals. Indicate good weather. |
Cirrocumulus | Small, high altitude rounded white puffs that appear in long rows. In tropical regions they may indicate an approaching hurricane. |
Cirrostratus | Thin, sheetlike, high altitude. They come 12-24 hours before a rain/snow storm. |
Cumulus | White, puffy clouds that look like pieces of floating cotton. They can develop into cumulonimbus clouds (thunderstorm clouds). |
Altocumulus | Mid-level clouds that are made of water droplets. Appear as grey, puffy masses. Usually form in groups. Expect thunderstorms in late afternoon. |
Cumulonimbus
Image:
O2s15 (image/jpeg)
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High winds can flatten the top of these clouds into an anvil-like shape. Associated with heavy rain, snow, hail, lightning and even tornadoes. |
Stratocumulus | Low, lumpy and grey. Characterised by large dark, rounded masses, usually in groups, lines or waves. |
Lenticular | Made by wave wind patterns created by the mountains. |
Stratus | Uniform greyish clouds hat often cover the entire sky. They resemble fog that doesn't reach the ground. |
Altostratus | Grey or blue mid-level clouds that usually cover the whole sky. Sun or moon may shine through these clouds, but will appear watery or fuzzy. These indicate a storm with continuous rain or snow. |
Nimbostratus | These form a dark grey, wet cloudy layer associated with continuously falling rain or snow. |
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