Other storm features: Stock photos of various other cloud forms and features found around severe storms and supercells. Examples include overshooting top, roll cloud, flanking line, beaver tail cloud, etc.

  • A flanking line feeds air into a storm complex
    • W001134S
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  • A beaver tail is a flat cloud extension from a storm updraft
    • W000681S
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  • The flanking line on a supercell severe storm
    • W000559Z
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  • This cloud tube formed in a storm’s outflow is a roll cloud
    • W000203Z
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  • Close view of jumping Cirrus on the top edge of an anvil
    • W982730S
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  • A small cloud tuft, or jumping Cirrus, above an anvil cloud
    • W982729S
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  • Storm anvil rollover: knuckles on an anvil edge from a strong updraft
    • W970817Z
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  • Outflow creates a roll cloud sausage with a low Pileus cap
    • W970444Z
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  • Overshooting top or penetrating top on a storm
    • W953829Z
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  • A severe storm anvil with an overshooting top
    • W950812Z
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  • Close-up of anvil knuckles under an outward moving cloud flange
    • W942232Z
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  • Dryline clouds before storms begin
    • W931408S
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  • Pale green sky color under a storm
    • W930721Z
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  • Storm flanking line clouds along an axis
    • W930137Z
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  • A roll cloud moving forward from a squall line
    • W922601S
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  • Tail cloud on the developing lowering of a severe storm
    • W921735S
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  • A smooth roll cloud on a weak outflow boundary
    • W914317Z
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  • Hailstorm: green light under storms due to filtering of light
    • W912532Z
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  • From LCL to LFC, a supercell updraft builds upward
    • W902108Z
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  • Distant lowering on a storm connected to a long roll cloud tube
    • W874130Z
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