| Cloud Watching | ![]() |
|
| As you have already seen, clouds come in a variety of shapes and sizes depending on how and where they formed. Although there are just three main types of cloud, these types can combine to produce other types, each with its own characteristics. In all there are about ten different sorts of cloud, and these are usually identified according to their shape and how high they are in the sky. Clouds also have different symbols, some of which are illustrated below.
|
||
| Cirro...
|
Cirrus is usually the highest cloud of all. Here the
air is so cold that they are |
|
|
Cirrostratus
all high clouds start with the word "cirro". These clouds occur |
|
|
Cirrocumulus
these are tiny, high balls of icy, shadowless cloud. They often
|
|
| Alto... |
Altostratus medium-height clouds start with the word
"alto". Altostratus |
|
|
Altocumulus
these are medium-height cumulus clouds that look like squashed
|
|
| Cumulo...
|
Cumulus these fluffy clouds are the easiest to spot.
They are low-level clouds |
|
|
Cumulonimbus
these are bigger and darker than cumulus clouds and often
|
|
| Strato...
|
Stratocumulus these are also medium-height clouds and
look like long rolls |
|
|
Stratus are
low-level clouds that look like a grey blanket. The thick layers
|
|
| Nimbo... |
Nimbostratus are thick layers of cloud. They start
near the ground and |
|
| Some cloud types result in thunder and lightning - examples of more violent meteorological features found on Earth. Let's go to the next page to look at these in more detail. |
||