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Cloud Types Review CUMULUS Name means: heap Altitude: surface – 13,000 m (vertical growth) Description: Puffy white or light gray clouds with flat bottoms. Look like cotton balls. Associated Weather: predict fair weather CIRRUS Name Means: lock/tuft of hair Altitude: 5,000 – 13,000 m (high) Description: composed of ice and consist of long, thin, wispy streamers Associated Weather: predict fair weather (usually indicate a change in weather) CUMULONIMBUS Name Means: Cumulus- heap Nimbus- rainy cloud Altitude: Surface – 13,000 m (vertical growth) Description: Winds will flatten the top of the cloud out into an anvil-like shape Associated Weather: associated with heavy rain, snow, hail, lightning, and tornadoes STRATUS Name Means: Flattened or spread out Altitude: Surface – 2,000 m (low) Description: Uniform gray color and can cover most or all of the sky Associated Weather: light mist or drizzle Rain: Forms when tiny water droplets collide together in clouds. Eventually drops become too heavy and fall out of the clouds as rain. Snow: Type of precipitation in which water falls as ice crystals, or combinations of many ice crystals called snowflakes. Snowflakes form in clouds where the temperature is below freezing. Sleet: Forms when a partially melted snowflake or raindrop turns back into ice as it is falling through the air. Usually tiny clear ice pellets that bounce when they hit the ground. Hail: Forms as a result of strong updrafts in cumulonimbus clouds. Rising water vapor freezes forming ice, the ice is suspended in the air by the strong updrafts and will later fall back down. This process will occur over and over adding layer upon layer to the hailstone. Freezing Rain: Forms when raindrops fall in liquid form and immediately freeze as they hit a cold surface.