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Wall clouds and funnel clouds.

In my chases I have encountered dozens of wall clouds and a handful of funnel clouds. Above are two of my better photographs: on the left is a massive wall cloud that appeared in southern Illinois on April 15, 1998, on the right is a large funnel I witnessed on May 29, 2001.
 

Wall clouds take on many shapes, sizes and colors. The lowering denotes a storm's updraft where rapidly rising air causes lower pressure just below the main updraft. In lower pressure water can condense and form clouds at a relative humidity below 100%, thus you may have a visible lowering of the cloud base such as in these two examples below.
 

 on the left is a large wall cloud that appeared south of Scottsbluff, Nebraska on May 21, 1998. On the right is a picture of a wall cloud associated with storms near Davenport, Iowa on May 18, 1997.
 

If a wall cloud has an intense, rotating updraft it should be considered rather dangerous since it is this type of wall cloud that can produce a tornado.

 The rotating wall cloud on the left prompted a Tornado Warning but no funnel was spotted.  The Hayes Center, Nebraska storm of May 21, 1998 was obviously associated with a mesocyclone. The funnel is very faint at the lowest point of the wall cloud. About a minute later a weak tornado appeared, the tornado was difficult to spot due to nighttime darkness.
 

Many wall clouds are harmless and do not pose a significant threat.

The wall cloud on the left showed some signs of slow rotation but failed to produce a tornado because of weak low level winds. (West Texas May 25, 1999)  On the right is a wall cloud that exhibited no visible signs of rotation. (May 25, 1999).
 

Sometimes wall clouds can appear harmless at a distance but they can produce ground based circulations.

This wall cloud looks harmless enough but a few minutes later a significant ground based circulation appeared (photo on the right).

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Brian William Jalas.
bjalas@ix.netcom.com