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Which clouds grow vertically and not horizontally?
Which clouds grow vertically and not horizontally?
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Following types of clouds show vertical growth:
1) Cumulus clouds often look like a piece of floating cotton with sharp outlines, a domed top, and a flat base.
There is usually a great deal of blue sky between each cumulus cloud.
Cumulus clouds that only show slight vertical growth are associated with fair weather. They are also called “fair weather cumulus”.
2) Once cumulus clouds begin to grow and resemble a head of cauliflower they are called cumulus congestus, swelling cumulus, or towering cumulus.
Most of the time these clouds are still separate, but sometimes they join together.
Showery precipitation falls from these clouds.
3) Cumulonimbus clouds are thunderstorm clouds.
These clouds are huge clouds. Their bases may be no more thatn 2,000 feet above the earth’s surface, while their tops extend over 39,000 feet higher into the atmosphere.
Cumulonimbus clouds are the type of clouds that grow vertically rather than horizontally. These clouds are known for their towering, vertical structure, which can extend from relatively low altitudes to very high altitudes in the atmosphere. Cumulonimbus clouds are often associated with severe weather conditions, including thunderstorms, heavy rain, lightning, hail, and even tornadoes.