Crazy Clouds or More?

Loopi

The Bearded One
Messages
909
http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/smartnews/2012/08/ufo-or-crazy-cloud-weird-cloud-atlas-helps-you-decide/

August 28, 2012 12:46 pm

UFO or Crazy Cloud? ‘Weird Cloud Atlas’ Helps You Decide


Mammatus clouds over Saskatchewan. Photo: Robinlawless
There are way more types of clouds in the world than “big, white, and puffy,” despite what the drawings of nearly every five year old or, let’s face it, adult would suggest. Varying with altitude, moisture content and how the atmosphere is moving around, clouds come in a vast array of unusual shapes and sizes. Some take on undulating forms, like gravity wave clouds, which arise when a stream of wind undulates up and down as it flows through the air, with clouds forming at the peaks of the wave and clearings at the troughs. And that’s just the beginning. When unusual clouds arise, people tend to get pretty excited.

These gravity wave clouds were formed when air was diverted up and over a small island. Photo: NASA Earth Observatory
In the Telegraph, the newspaper compiled a “Weird Cloud Atlas,” showcasing a number of unusual cloud types seen around the world. One cloud type, which kicks off the slideshow and is known as a lenticular cloud, is a favorite of UFO aficionados. In fact, these disk-shaped clouds have a tendency to be mistaken for extraterrestrial vehicles.
There are a few choice types that didn’t make it on to the list however, such as:
Kelvin Helmholtz clouds. These unusual wave-shaped clouds are formed when two separate streams of air in the atmosphere are flowing alongside one another at different speeds. The interaction causes turbulence at the interface between the two air packets, leading to the strange structure. This process is explained in more detail here.

Kelvin-Helmholtz clouds. Photo: Brooks Martner / NOAA / SCATCAT
Morning Glory clouds are a regular occurrence in northeastern Australia, but unfortunately scientists aren’t really sure how they arise.

Morning Glory clouds in Queensland, Australia. Photo: Mick Petroff
And, weird clouds aren’t purely a terrestrial occurrence. Working from photos taken by the Mars Pathfinder rover in 1997, scientists recently discovered Martian high altitude clouds. Unlike on Earth, these Martian clouds are made from carbon dioxide, not water.

High altitude carbon dioxide clouds on Mars. Photo: NASA Pathfinder
 

Num7

Administrator
Staff
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12,453
The first picture... How are such clouds supposed to form that way?
 

Loopi

The Bearded One
Messages
909
No Idea. o_0 Looks like the way they make zero gravity fire look in the movies... The second picture is also interesting with the "gravity waves"
 

BlastTyrant

Senior Member
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2,599
I've seen the clouds from the first picture before here in Minnesota, i believe they formed right after a Big T-storm i took a pic with my phone will have to post it when i get home after work today.
 

TnWatchdog

Senior Member
Messages
7,099

Here is a crazy cloud similar to the first pic of this thread...but not as crazy! Pic taken in TN on the south edge of a storm...as the sirens were sounding.
 

TnWatchdog

Senior Member
Messages
7,099

This is similar to the second pic of this thread taken on I-40 in TN. It is what we call electomagnetic anomalies, possibly caused by HAARP or similar Tesla technologies. These form after chemtrails have been sprayed.
 

TnWatchdog

Senior Member
Messages
7,099

This tube cloud appeared out of nowhere. I was working inside a rental house and looked outside at the sky, as I always do. This is what I saw. I took several pics of this formation cause it stayed there in it's form for over an hour and was several miles long. I estimate 10-15 miles of this same density. Chemtrails were done earlier that day and this is what was left. Pic taken south of Nashville, TN.
 

TnWatchdog

Senior Member
Messages
7,099
Image.aspx


Nebraska clouds: Cumulonimbus Mammatus clouds, which are sometimes associated with severe thunderstorms, form over Hastings, Neb.
 

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