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A thunder cloud, or Cumulonimbus cloud, looks like a massive, tall, white puffy cloud with an anvil shaped top and a very dark grey base.
Pretty sure it is Cumulus:This low cloud with a typical base of below 7,000 feet isa cumulus cloud. These clouds have distinct edges, areusually white, puffy with a popcorn like appearance.They have a noticeable vertical development. Cumulusclouds can be seen isolated as in this picture or groupedtogether is clusters. The cumulus cloud as all low cloudsare most often composed of water droplets, but can canhave ice crystals in colder climates.
These are all types of clouds. Stratus clouds form layers or smooth, even sheets in the sky. Cumulus clouds are masses of puffy, white clouds, often with flat bases. Some prefixes of cloud names describe the height of the cloud base. The prefixaltodescribes middle-elevation clouds. Clouds associated with rain or snow often have the the word nimbus attached to them. So, altostratus clouds are clouds that form layers, or smooth, even sheets in the sky at middle-elevation, altocumulus clouds are masses of puffy, white clouds, often with flat bases at middle-elevation, and nimbostratus clouds are clouds that form smooth, even sheets in the sky and are associated with rain or snow.
Wall cloud.
A wall cloud is a large lowering of a rain free cloud base often associated with the rotating updraft of a thunderstorm known as a mesocyclone.
Cumulus clouds are the extremely puffy clouds in the sky. The base of the cloud is usually flat and is topped by billowing towers of puffy white clouds resembling cauliflower heads.
A thunder cloud, or Cumulonimbus cloud, looks like a massive, tall, white puffy cloud with an anvil shaped top and a very dark grey base.
they are mid altitude clouds, forms when warm air rises, they are also puffy, white clouds that tend to have flat bottoms, and they indicate fair weather
Pretty sure it is Cumulus:This low cloud with a typical base of below 7,000 feet isa cumulus cloud. These clouds have distinct edges, areusually white, puffy with a popcorn like appearance.They have a noticeable vertical development. Cumulusclouds can be seen isolated as in this picture or groupedtogether is clusters. The cumulus cloud as all low cloudsare most often composed of water droplets, but can canhave ice crystals in colder climates.
Wall cloud.
These are all types of clouds. Stratus clouds form layers or smooth, even sheets in the sky. Cumulus clouds are masses of puffy, white clouds, often with flat bases. Some prefixes of cloud names describe the height of the cloud base. The prefixaltodescribes middle-elevation clouds. Clouds associated with rain or snow often have the the word nimbus attached to them. So, altostratus clouds are clouds that form layers, or smooth, even sheets in the sky at middle-elevation, altocumulus clouds are masses of puffy, white clouds, often with flat bases at middle-elevation, and nimbostratus clouds are clouds that form smooth, even sheets in the sky and are associated with rain or snow.
Tornadoes are made by thunderstorms, made by cumulonimbus clouds. They appear as very tall white puffy clouds with a dark base and an anvil shaped top. Thunderstorms that can produce tornadoes also have a corkscrew appearance or with striations in the cloud tower.
A mammatus cloud is not a cloud characteristic of tornadoes, but it is often associated with severe thunderstorms. Mammatus clouds consist of small, smooth puffs of cloud that hand down from the base of a larger cloud, often the anvil of a thunderstorm.
A wall cloud is a large lowering of a rain free cloud base often associated with the rotating updraft of a thunderstorm known as a mesocyclone.
First. A wall cloud is not a cumulonimbus clouds, but is a smaller cloud that extends from the base of a cumulonimbus. Tornadoes often form from wall clouds.
A wall cloud looks like a lowering of the cloud base, often with a tail like projection on it. Below are links to a few photographs.
No. A tornado is a violently rotating column of air extending from the base of a thunderstorm to the ground. A tornado is often, but not always made visible by a funnel cloud. But the tornado is not the cloud itself.