Cloud Inversion
A cloud inversion is veiling a massive erupting volcanic crater during the 2021 Geldingadalir eruption in Iceland.
Jeroen Van Nieuwenhove, Iceland
International Aerial Photographer of the Year Awards
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Cloud Inversion
A cloud inversion is veiling a massive erupting volcanic crater during the 2021 Geldingadalir eruption in Iceland.
Jeroen Van Nieuwenhove, Iceland
International Aerial Photographer of the Year Awards

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3234. Shot on my Canon at Mount Tamalpais State Park in Marin County, California.
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We will still be here tomorrow, but our dreams may not.
So yesterday I drove to Eryri and climbed Moel Siabod with the hope of clear skies. I reached the summit around 7pm and pitched my tent in thick cloud. Then it rained until midnight, so I didn’t hold out too much hope. However poking my head outside my tent at 5:30 this morning I was greeted with this absolutely stunning view.
Morning Clouds - Dolomites, Italy 2023

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Peekaboo
Cloud Inversion
Landscape Language
Cloud inversion (noun) – a phenomenon when cold air is trapped under a layer of warm air.
Also known as temperature inversions, cloud inversions are a weather phenomenon created when a layer of cold air is trapped under a layer of warm air. Typically, warm air is closer to the earth’s surface. In an inversion, condensed moisture in the cold layer forms clouds that are trapped near the ground. Cloud inversions often form in valleys like those around Mount Rainier. It is not uncommon for it to be cloudy and cool at low elevations and warmer and sunny at higher elevations! Do you have photos of cloud inversions observed around the park?
NPS/S. Redman Photo of a cloud inversion filling the Nisqually Valley, September 2011. ~kl