Cloudspotting for Beginners
By William Grill and Gavin Pretor-Pinney
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About this ebook
Renowned journalist, public speaker, and founder of the Cloud Appreciation Society Gavin Pretor-Pinney details the key facts and characteristics about each major cloud type. To accompany these scientific tidbits, William Grill’s gorgeous illustrations of vast colorful skies and mesmerizing cloud patterns create a calming, thought-provoking learning experience.
From low-lying Stratus to high-flying Cirrus, Cloudspotting for Beginners covers how clouds are formed, the altitudes they prefer, the curious shapes they take, how they affect other meterological events, and more. The book breaks down the life and structure of a cloud on a molecular level, and then even expands on their interesting cross-planetary variations—for example, Jupiter’s clouds are composed of ammonia ice crystals and Saturn’s clouds congregate in an inexplicable hexagon around the planet's North Pole.
Clouds require a fascinating amount of chemical precision in order to exist, yet they disappear and form again on a daily basis with ease. Cloudspotting for Beginners is a whimsical lesson on the oft-overlooked extraordinary lives of clouds that will serve as a gentle reminder to be present and observant in the face of impermanence. Just as informative as it is poetic and peaceful, this is the perfect guide for cloud appreciators and sky lovers.
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Cloudspotting for Beginners - William Grill
The Ten Main Clouds
Cumulus is a happy-go-lucky cloud. It forms on sunny days, low in the sky, on invisible columns of air rising off the sun-warmed ground. It has crisp edges, a flattish base, and mounds on top like a cauliflower.
Everyone loves a Cumulus.
Stratocumulus is the world’s most common cloud. That’s because it forms over huge areas of ocean. When you see it from land it’s a low, clumpy layer that often looks a bit scrappy, like a rough patchwork of white and gray. From the window seat of a plane, it’s a landscape for your imagination made of rolling cloud hills and valleys.
Stratus is a low cloud blanket to fall asleep in.
It’s a smooth, light gray layer that often obscures the tops of hills and skyscrapers.
Sometimes it drifts in from the sea.
It’s the only cloud that visits us down at ground level, which is when we call it fog.
Altocumulus is a midlevel cloud: higher than the low ones, and lower than the high ones. It’s often arranged in lots of little clumps, known as cloudlets. Altocumulus likes to organize its cloudlets into orderly patterns that can cover the whole sky. It’s a cloud that likes to be neat and tidy.