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Chad Hahn, warning coordination meteorologist at the National Weather Service, also confirmed a tornado did not touch down in ...
Many of you saw this scary-looking cloud near Truist Park Tuesday night. Pictures and videos started circulating on social ...
Dark skies ahead of an ominous storm can blur the line between harmless and hazardous. Here’s how to tell if that spooky cloud is really a budding twister ...
Often called "scary-looking clouds," by meteorologists because viewers reported them as funnel clouds or tornados, scud clouds may move up into the storm, but they don't rotate rotating like a ...
A scary-looking cloud was spotted by many on hand for the Atlanta Braves game at Truist Park in suburban Atlanta on Tuesday ...
COBB COUNTY, Ga. — If you saw a large, funnel-looking cloud in the sky over metro Atlanta on Tuesday night, no, you didn’t ...
Some cloud formations can look scary, and they can be a sign of a storm. Here's how they form and what they are.
The claim: Image shows storm over Rio de Janeiro, Brazil After Hurricane Ian hit the coast of Florida in late September, a dramatic image of a storm gained thousands of shares on social media ...
Shelf clouds are attached to the storm’s base (unlike roll clouds, which float freely on their own). They often look like giant horizontal wedges, smooth in front and messy underneath.
The cloud, which was seen near Truist Park and captured by an Atlanta News First viewer near Akers Mill Road, is called a ...
Shelf clouds typically form along the leading edge of a thunderstorm. As the storm pushes out cool air in a downdraft, it collides with the warm, moist air just ahead of it.
Storm chasers colloquially refer to these tubular clouds clouds as " scud vacuums." They can look like a tornado but are benign, slow-moving, vertical fog banks.