The Scotsman

Heads in the clouds as ‘new species’ named

● New formations included in atlas ● Power station plumes also listed

- By ILONA AMOS Environmen­t Correspond­ent iamos@scotsman.com

A new “species” of cloud and a number of special formations have been officially named for the first time in the internatio­nal cloud bible.

The wave-like volutus joins 14 other recognised cloud species, including stratiform­us, nebulosus and lenticular­is, in the 2017 edition of the World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on’s Cloud Atlas.

The moniker will now be used by profession­al meteorolog­ists around the globe.

New special clouds have also been listed, including flammageni­tus, formed as a result of forest fires, and homogenitu­s, which appear over power station cooling towers.

Five more supplement­ary features of existing cloud types are also catalogued in the new inventory: asperitas; cavum; cauda, or tail cloud; fluctus, known as Kelvinhelm­holz wave; and murus, dubbed wall cloud.

“Throughout the centuries, few natural phenomena have inspired as much scientific thought and artistic reflection as clouds,” said WMO secretary-general Petteri Taalas.

“More than two millennia ago, Aristotle studied clouds and wrote a treatise addressing their role in the hydrologic­al cycle. But it was Luke Howard, an amateur meteorolog­ist living in England in the early 19th century, who produced the first classifica­tion of clouds.”

He added: “Identifyin­g, describing and naming clouds remains critical to the study of weather and climate. Today scientists understand that clouds play a vital role in regulating the earth’s energy balance, climate and weather.”

Rob Varley, chief executive of the Met Office, said: “Clouds play a key role in the function of our planet’s climate system, and the naming of the new volutus species of cloud we are continuall­y learning and developing our understand­ing.”

The Internatio­nal Cloud Atlas was first published in the late 19th century and was last updated in 1987. The 2017 edition will primarily be a webbased portal, though it may be published in hard copy.

The present internatio­nal system of Latin-based cloud classifica­tion has been used since 1803.

There are ten basic cloud genera, defined according to where in the sky they form and their approximat­e appearance – including alto, cirrus, cumulus, nimbus and stratus.

These are subdivided into species, which describe shape and internal structure, and varieties, which describe their transparen­cy and arrangemen­t. In total there are around 100 combinatio­ns.

Volutus, or roll cloud, occurs within the genera altocumulu­s and stratocumu­lus. It is a long, typically low, horizontal tube-shaped cloud mass that often appears to roll about a horizontal axis.

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 ??  ?? 0 Some of the new cloud species contained in the updated Internatio­nal Cloud Atlas – clockwise from top: homomutati­s, asperitas and fluctus
0 Some of the new cloud species contained in the updated Internatio­nal Cloud Atlas – clockwise from top: homomutati­s, asperitas and fluctus
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