Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Fire-Breathing Storm Systems

    A cumulonimbus without the "pyre" part is imposing enough - a massive, anvil-shaped tower of power reaching five miles (8 km) high, hurling thunderbolts, wind and rain.  Add smoke and fire to the mix and you have pyrocumulonimbus, an explosive storm cloud actually created by the smoke and heat from fire, and which can destroy tens of thousands of acres and in the process, "pyroCb" storms funnel their smoke like a chimney into Earth's stratosphere, with lingering ill effects.  Researchers believe these intense storms may be the source of what previously was believed to have been volcanic particles in the stratosphere.   They also suggest pyroCbs happen more often than thought, and say they're responsible for a huge volume of pollutants trapped in the upper atmosphere.  Three "mystery cloud phenomena" were cited as examples that were actually the result of pyrocumulonimbus storms, including one initially attributed to the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines.  The plume thought to have been from Pinatubo was, it turns out, from a pyrocumulonimbus storm in Canada. (Science Daily)

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