Clouds are typically sorted and identified by characteristics such as their height in the sky, texture, and the type of “weather” they do or do not produce. A good way to get better at identifying clouds is to practice. Make sure to always look up and frequently take pictures of those clouds. Use those pictures to compare what is here and other cloud pictures to help identify those clouds.
This cloud index is composed of photos taken by us, your WROC Weather Team, with one exception on the more difficult to capture cloud types. First, we’ll look at the 10 basic cloud types:
Upper Level Clouds
Cirrus, Cirrocumulus, and Cirrostratus
This first group of clouds are the highest in the troposphere with the prefix “cirro” meaning “curl.” Cirrus clouds are thin and wispy in appearance that often look “hair-like.” They contain ice crystals that occasionally provide unique colors to the sky, and are typically white in appearance.

Photo: Christine Gregory

Cirrus
Photo: James Gilbert

Photo: James Gilbert

Photo: Christine Gregory
Mid-Level Clouds
Altocumulus, Altostratus, Nimbostratus
These clouds are considered to be mid-level clouds, despite their prefix “alto” meaning “high.” They usually are composed mainly of water droplets and can take on many appearances. Altocumulus clouds are usually more white and patch-like while the others are much thicker and more gray in appearance. The exception of Nimbostratus are typically considered to be more “low-level” due to its lowering base.

Photo: Josh Nichols

Photo: Christine Gregory

Photo: National Weather Service

Photo: Christine Gregory
Low-level clouds
Cumulus, Cumulonimbus, Stratocumulus, Stratus
The lowest forming clouds in the sky with a multitude of characteristics. These clouds are also composed of water droplets and are unique in that they can stretch vertically very high into the troposphere, while others remain lower and more flat.

“Fair Weather” Cumulus
Photo: James Gilbert

Photo: Christine Gregory

Photo: Christine Gregory

Photo: James Gilbert

Photo: James Gilbert
There are come cloud types that are just too unique to fit into one specific category. Here are some of the more rare and unique types of clouds:
Mammatus clouds appear pouch-like and are often found on the underside of thunderstorm anvil clouds. They form by air that sinks instead of rises as it typically does to form clouds.

Photo: Christine Gregory

Photo: James Gilbert
Shelf clouds form on the leading edge of thunderstorms. They form as a result of strong, cool air being pushed out ahead of the storm known as a a “gust front” as it meets warm, moist air to form the low lying cloud base.

Photo: Christine Gregory

Photo: Eric Snitil
Lenticular clouds are “lens-like” clouds that typically form downwind of a mountain, but sometimes form elsewhere when stable, moist air flows over something that disturbs the air such as turbulence or shear, ultimately forming its smooth, lens shape.

Photo: Christine Gregory

Photo: Christine Gregory
Cloud Iridescence is not as much a “cloud type” as it is an effect from a mix of sunlight and ice crystals within a cloud, typically cirrus. It’s a colorful, optical phenomenon that occurs as a result of diffraction as small water droplets or ice crystals scatter the sunlight to create the rainbow colors.

Photo: Christine Gregory
Wait too long and you’ll miss these short-lived Horseshoe Vortex cloud formations.. They form as a result of a rising cloud getting caught in rapid horizontal shear in the atmosphere where the conditions are just right. They’re also know to be a form of “fair weather funnel clouds.”

Photo: Christine Gregory
Fall Streak or Hole Punch clouds are very hard to spot, but are very cool to look at. They get their name from the hole or gap like appearance they take on when something disturbs the air such as a plane or other aircraft. They usually are found to occur in “alto” or “cirro” cumulus clouds.

Photo: Christine Gregory
Scud clouds can often be mistaken as funnel clouds for their ominous appearance, but are simply a type of fractus clouds that occur. They’re essentially cloud fragments that form as a result of warm, moist air rising into the atmosphere, and are known for their ragged and wispy appearance.

Photo: Eric Snitil
Wall clouds are “lowerings” from the base of a rotating thunderstorm called a supercell, and are associated with producing funnel clouds and tornadoes.

Photo: Christine Gregory
The Kelvin-Helmholtz cloud, or as Eric wanted to call it-the “crown” cloud, forms as a result of vertical shear instability. This occurs when air is moving at different speeds at increasing heights in the atmosphere, and disturbs the clouds to form these “tail-like” tops to them.

Photo: Eric Snitil
Sun Dogs are another example of an effect on clouds and sunlight. These rainbows in the sky form as a result of the diffraction of hexagonal ice crystals in cirrus clouds, usually found in concentrated patches at a 22 degree halo around the sun.

Photo: James Gilbert
Crepuscular rays are shafts of light that form as the sun sets, and radiates from the position of the sun into the western sky.

Photo: Christine Gregory
Some TIPS on how to identify clouds and watch for rain HERE, and you can check out a more in-depth description of some of these cloud types HERE.
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