Iowa Woman Discovers New Cloud Type

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MICHAEL J. CRUMB | June 11, 2009 04:40 PM EST | AP

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This June 20, 2006 photo provided on Monday, June 8, 2009 and taken by Jane Wiggins from a downtown Cedar Rapids, Iowa office building shows what may become the first new cloud type to be recognized by scientists since 1951. (AP Photo/Jane Wiggins)

DES MOINES, Iowa — Looking out the 11th floor window of her law office, Jane Wiggins did a double take and grabbed her camera. The dark, undulating clouds hovering outside were unlike anything she'd seen before.

"It looked like Armageddon," said Wiggins, a paralegal and amateur photographer in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. "The shadows of the clouds, the lights and the darks, and the greenish-yellow backdrop. They seemed to change."

They dissipated within 15 minutes, but the photo Wiggins captured in June 2006 intrigued _ and stumped _ a group of dedicated weather watchers who now are pushing weather authorities to create a new cloud category, something that hasn't been done since 1951.

Breaking into the cloud family would require surviving layers of skeptical international review. Still, Gavin Pretor-Pinney and his England-based Cloud Appreciation Society are determined to establish a new variety. They've given Wiggins' photo and similar pictures taken in different parts of the world to experts in England, and are discussing the subject fervently online.

"They (the clouds) were the first ones that I noted of this type and I was unsure which category to put them under," said Pretor-Pinney, author of "The Cloudspotter's Guide." "When we put pictures up online we list the category, and I wasn't sure how to categorize it."

Some scientists are skeptical. They argue that researchers who have long watched the sky haven't seen anything distinctly new for decades.

There are three main groups of clouds: cumulous, cirrus and stratus. Each has various sub-classifications built on other details of the formation.

Brant Foote, a longtime scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo., said the clouds photographed by Wiggins already fit into the existing cumulous classification.

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But Pretor-Pinney, who never studied meteorology, believes the clouds merit their own cumulus sub-classification. He proposes they be called altocumulus undulatus asperatus. The last word _ Latin for roughen or agitate _ is a reference to the clouds' undulating surface.

"Not necessarily gentle or steady, but quite violent-looking, turbulent, almost twisted in its appearance," he said.

The group has compiled several photographs documenting the formations from the billowy, rolling clouds shot by Wiggins in Iowa to ones from New Zealand that were much more menacing, hanging lava-like in the sky.

Foote said it would be "very unusual" for such a formation to be recognized as a new variety of cloud.

"People have been looking at clouds for hundreds of years and the general cloud classification is well defined," Foote said. "It's not as if someone discovered a new plant in the Amazon. It's what you've seen every day. There was no atmospheric condition that caused a new kind of cloud to form."

Pretor-Pinney is working with the Royal Meteorological Society in Reading, England, to prepare his case. If that group signs off, the proposal will go to the United Nation's World Meteorological Organization in Geneva.

Society executive director Paul Hardaker said a small panel within the society is gathering evidence to review. Their efforts include talking with those who took the submitted photos to determinine when, where and amid what weather they were taken. Hardaker said meteorologists tend to be skeptical of such proposals.

"We like to believe that just about everything that can be seen has been, but you do get caught once in a while with the odd, new, interesting thing," Hardaker said. "By this stage we think it's sufficiently interesting to explore it further and we're optimistic about the information we've got."

DES MOINES, Iowa — Looking out the 11th floor window of her law office, Jane Wiggins did a double take and grabbed her camera. The dark, undulating clouds hovering outside were unlike anything s...
DES MOINES, Iowa — Looking out the 11th floor window of her law office, Jane Wiggins did a double take and grabbed her camera. The dark, undulating clouds hovering outside were unlike anything s...
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betcha it's hiding a UFO

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:10 PM on 06/12/2009
- KLordsha I'm a Fan of KLordsha 39 fans permalink
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Is this the cloud that they're going to name.. DUCK!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:54 PM on 06/12/2009
- Marnie1 I'm a Fan of Marnie1 43 fans permalink

There is nothing new here,
Come to north Texas, southern Oklahoma in tornado season.
These are just undulations as two different air masses rub across each other, kind of like an area rug bunching up in rows of undulations. Or a surf rolling over the sand.
I've see green clouds, irridescent clouds, yellow, and brown clouds during the spraing storms of north Texas. It just how the light rertacts off the droplets.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:32 PM on 06/12/2009
- tssawy2 I'm a Fan of tssawy2 4 fans permalink

We had some over Fort Worth just yesterday as we had several bands of severe weather come through...and today on the West side of town it was very green/freaky outside...I just read there were 3 tornados in Weatherford (just west of FTW)..... but no "new" thing about these clouds...people here generally accept them as tornado-related.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 AM on 06/13/2009

Is this the real life?

Is this just fantasy?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:24 PM on 06/12/2009

photoshop is cool...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:58 PM on 06/12/2009
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This picture is legit...it was NOT photoshopped! I live in Cedar Rapids and saw those exact clouds. Come on people...give all the negativity a rest!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:28 PM on 06/12/2009
photo

I agree.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:01 PM on 06/13/2009

Someday a real rain is gonna come...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 PM on 06/12/2009
- vietveter I'm a Fan of vietveter 23 fans permalink

Having grown up in Iowa I can tell you first hand that those are not “New”

My younger sister named them - egg crate clouds - many years ago.

The real reason folks don’t see them is they are busy heading for their basement

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:54 PM on 06/12/2009
- loncowber I'm a Fan of loncowber 7 fans permalink
photo

Bury your treasure
Burn your crops
Black water risin' and it
Ain't gonna stop

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:46 PM on 06/12/2009
- mjeffn I'm a Fan of mjeffn 27 fans permalink

Ignore it...I had just gotten a new bong.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:21 PM on 06/12/2009
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Ha! :)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:39 PM on 06/12/2009
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Seems kind of eerie; a natural warning sign about the climate maybe. The earth often sends tremors prior to the big one, whose to say the sky can't do the same. Then again, it could be nothing but a breathtaking display ;)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:26 PM on 06/12/2009
- bobdob I'm a Fan of bobdob 18 fans permalink

Two things that suck about this article: 1). The headline makes an unsupported claim and 2). There's no link so we can see for ourselves. I know bandwidth costs money, but couldn't you have provided a photo besides that measly thumbnail?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:52 PM on 06/12/2009
- Big0725 I'm a Fan of Big0725 23 fans permalink
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Great link! Just when you think that Hollywood has shown you it all, good ole Mother Nature comes up and bitchslaps you back into reality.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:40 PM on 06/12/2009
- arspar183 I'm a Fan of arspar183 4 fans permalink
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reminds me of a gilligan island episode where the professor says something about not being able to see far because the nimbus cumuli were in the way, and gilligan responds.. yeah and the dark clouds are in the way too...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:06 PM on 06/12/2009
- fumes I'm a Fan of fumes 92 fans permalink
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seen it: in louisville ky many years ago as a tornado went by six miles to the south.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:52 PM on 06/12/2009

They are called "Gravity Waves".

Here is a link.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity_wave

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 PM on 06/12/2009
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Yeah, I don't even think that "gravity waves" are a real thing. There may be an entirely different process going on that requires some serious further study. See the link I provided below...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:04 PM on 06/12/2009
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I think they're called Spielbergian.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 06/12/2009

This means something...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:15 PM on 06/12/2009
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