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He slept on his left side, thought cirrocumulus clouds looked like mastodon flatulence and always flipped his lucky pebble to decide whether it was a hunting day or a gathering day.” But let the ...
The appearance of cirrocumulus clouds, often described as looking like fish scales, is seen as a sign of changing weather. These clouds, also known as a “mackerel sky,” typically form when ...
WAVY 10’s Chief Meteorologist Emeritus Don Slater identified this phenomenon as a fallstreak hole, a large gap formed in altocumulus or cirrocumulus clouds that are caused by supercooled water ...
They can separate into altocumulus standing lenticular, stratocumulus standing lenticular, and cirrocumulus standing lenticular clouds.