2. A change to wet may be expected when, after continued fair weather, filaments, or bands of cirri (apparently stationary), with converging ends, travel across the sky.
3. Rain or snow, and windy, variable weather may be expected when cirri with fine tails vary much in a few hours.
4. Continued wet weather may be undoubtedly expected when horizontal sheets of cirri fall quickly and pass into the cirro-stratus.
5. A storm of wind and rain may be expected within forty-eight hours when fine threads of cirri seem brushed backward from the south-west.
45.
Cumulus.
Cumulus.—This modification of cloud is most frequently seen on bright summer days, and is appropriately called “the day cloud” and “the summer cloud.” It is formed only in the daytime, in summer calms, and results from the rise of vapours from rivers, lakes, and marshes into the colder regions of the air, the lower portions of which are readily saturable. They are characterized by a horizontal base, from which they rise in dense conical and hemispherical masses rivalling mountains in their magnitude.
Their formation is due to the convection of heat from the earth’s surface, which renders the lower atmospheric strata capable of holding a larger amount of aqueous vapour and simultaneously establishes an upward current, which reaching the colder regions of the air brings about the condensation of the aqueous vapour into the elegant and ever-beautiful forms admired alike “by saint, by savage, and by sage.” These begin as mere specks, which enlarge until the sky is nearly covered in the afternoon, and towards sunset they generally disappear, their tops becoming cirri when the air is dry.
1. Fine, calm, warm weather may be expected when cumuli are of moderate size and of pleasing form and colour.
2. Cold, tempestuous, rainy weather may be expected when cumuli cover the sky, rolling over each other in dense, dark, and abrupt masses.