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Morning Glory Clouds

That's very cool. (h/t +Donald Mclaughlin)

Reshared post from +Earth – add & share 🙂

Morning Glory Clouds over Australia

What causes these long, strange clouds? No one is sure. A rare type of cloud known as a Morning Glory cloud can stretch 1,000 kilometers long and occur at altitudes up to two kilometers high. Although similar roll clouds have been seen at specific places across the world, the ones over Burketown, Queensland Australia occur predictably every spring. Long, horizontal, circulating tubes of air might form when flowing, moist, cooling air encounters an inversion layer, an atmospheric layer where air temperature atypically increases with height. These tubes and surrounding air could cause dangerous turbulence for airplanes when clear. Morning Glory clouds can reportedly achieve an airspeed of 60 kilometers per hour over a surface with little discernible wind. On this picture, photographer Mick Petroff photographed some Morning Glory clouds from his airplane near the Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia.

Source: http://earthspacecircle.blogspot.com/2012/11/morning-glory-clouds-over-australia.html

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3 thoughts on “Morning Glory Clouds”

  1. My guess? The wind gets a nice laminar flow going as it comes in from the ocean, and then "breaks" on the shore line causing low pressure vortexes. But, then again, I know nothing about meteorology. It probably shows 😉

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