Cumulus and stratocumulus clouds in New Zealand. Cumulus clouds form from water vapour in rising columns of air which condenses as it cools. They often form at cold fronts where the advancing, cool air forces warm air upwards. Stratocumulus clouds consist of large rounded masses that form lines, or waves. Both cloud types usually form below 2000 metres in altitude. Photographed mid-afternoon in spring in Taupo district, in the central part of New Zealand's North Island.
px | px | dpi | = | cm | x | cm | = | MB |
Details
Creative#:
TOP24703385
Source:
達志影像
Authorization Type:
RM
Release Information:
須由TPG 完整授權
Model Release:
N/A
Property Release:
N/A
Right to Privacy:
No
Same folder images:
AFTERNOONATMOSPHERICPHENOMENONATMOSPHERICPHYSICSBLUESKYCUCUMULUSCLOUDCUMULUSCLOUDSFORESTGEOGRAPHICALGREENGRASSLOWALTITUDEMETEOROLOGICALNO-ONENOBODYSCSTRATOCUMULUSVOLCANOWATERVAPOURWEATHERCLOUDLANDSKYLANDSCAPEATMOSPHEREAIRNEWZEALANDTAUPODISTRICTNORTHISLANDMETEOROLOGYGEOGRAPHY21STCENTURYSPRING201810NOVEMBER2018
102018201821STAFTERNOONAIRALTITUDEATMOSPHERICATMOSPHERICBLUECENTURYCLOUDCLOUDCLOUDSCUCUMULUSCUMULUSDISTRICTFORESTGEOGRAPHICALGEOGRAPHYGRASSGREENISLANDLANDLANDSCAPEATMOSPHERELOWMETEOROLOGICALMETEOROLOGYNEWNO-ONENOBODYNORTHNOVEMBERPHENOMENONPHYSICSSCSKYSKYSPRINGSTRATOCUMULUSTAUPOVAPOURVOLCANOWATERWEATHERZEALAND