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Types of Clouds

Types of Clouds. Cirrus. Cirrus clouds can best be described as “ice-crystal” clouds that look like wispy curls of hair. These clouds are often the first signs of approaching weather changes. . Cirrus. Cirrocumulus.

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Types of Clouds

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  1. Types of Clouds

  2. Cirrus Cirrus clouds can best be described as “ice-crystal” clouds that look like wispy curls of hair. These clouds are often the first signs of approaching weather changes.

  3. Cirrus

  4. Cirrocumulus These clouds are often referred to as “mackerel sky”. The ripples in these clouds look like the scales on a fish and are a sign of unsettled weather to come.

  5. Cirrocumulus

  6. Cirrostratus These clouds are the color of milk, are thin, and form high up. They bring rain or snow and often cause the sun or moon to have the image of a halo around it.

  7. Cirrostratus

  8. Altostratus These are thin, gray clouds that bring rain.

  9. Altostratus

  10. Altocumulus Fluffy, gray clouds which either bring rain or sunshine.

  11. Altocumulus

  12. Nimbostratus Thick, gray clouds that bring rain or snow.

  13. Nimbostratus

  14. Stratus Gray clouds that bring drizzle and cause hill fog. These clouds are often low to the ground.

  15. Stratus

  16. Stratocumulus These clouds are often made up of uneven patches that appear after a storm. These clouds are a sign of drier weather to come.

  17. Stratocumulus

  18. Cumulus Fluffy clouds that look like cauliflowers and appear in sunny, summer skies. In the morning they form before the storm and in the afternoon they form after the storm.

  19. Cumulus

  20. Cumulonimbus These are towering clouds that bring thunderstorms that include rain, snow, or hail.

  21. Cumulonimbus

  22. THE END

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