The science of weather is a fascinating one; but even more so are the flukes and irregularities that can occur within our world. This is a list of 20 of the most amazing and unusual of those anomalies.

A rainbow is caused by the Sun shining on moisture droplets, most commonly in a post-rain atmosphere. A moon bow is much rarer, only seen at night when the moon is low and full to almost full. One popular place to see moon bows is at Cumberland Falls in Kentucky, as pictured above.

Mirages occur when light is refracted to produce an image of an object or the sky where it is not. It is most commonly seen on hot surfaces, such as the pavement or a desert.

Like rainbows, haloes are formed around the Sun due to moisture (in this case ice crystals) being refracted from the Sun’s rays in the upper atmosphere. Sometimes two or more areas of the circle or arcs surrounding the Sun will be brighter, forming what are called Sun Dogs. Haloes can also form around the Moon, and occasionally around the brighter stars and planets like Venus.

The belt of Venus is a phenomenon that occurs during dusty evenings when a band of pinkish or brownish sky will appear between the sky and the horizon.

Noctilucent clouds are atmospherically high clouds that refract light at dusk when the Sun has already set, illuminating the sky with no seeming light source.

Also known in the southern hemisphere as the Aurora Australis, the Aurora Borealis are charged particles from the Sun that have reached the Earth’s upper atmosphere and become excited. They are more typically seen closer to the poles and during the equinoxes of the year. [Photo taken by Senior Airman Joshua Strang. Large scale public domain copy here.]

Due to different atmospheric issues, the moon will occasionally appear tinged with a color, such as blue, orange, or red. Excess smoke, dust, and eclipses can cause the moon to change color.

These odd-shaped clouds are often associated with a storm front, especially one involving a thunderstorm. It’s not completely understood how they form. [Image copyright Jorn Olsen, available for purchase here.]

This weather phenomenon is luminous plasma that appears like fire on objects, such as the masts of ships or lightning rods, in an area that is electrically charged during a thunderstorm. This occurrence was named the after St Elmo, the patron saint of sailors.

A fire whirl is either a tornado spinning too close to a forest fire or a whirl created from too much heat in the area.

Another heat related phenomenon, pyrocumulus clouds form from the fast and intense heating of an area to create convecture, which in turn creates a cumulous cloud. Volcanoes, forest fires, and nuclear explosion (in the form of a mushroom cloud) are all prime causes of pyrocumulus clouds.

Sun Pillars occur when the setting sun reflects off high, icy clouds at different layers. It creates a pillar of light that reaches high into the sky. It is also possible to see moon pillars.

Linked closely to haloes, diamond dust is a fog made of frozen droplets.

Rare and yet real, cases exist of rains of animals instead of water. This has occurred occasionally throughout history, from the Biblical times up to recent history. Meteorologists are still unsure of the cause.

Virga is when ice crystals in clouds fall, but evaporate before hitting the ground. They appear as trails from clouds reaching for the surface, sometimes giving the cloud a jellyfish-like appearance.

These are winds that carry dense air from a higher elevation to a lower elevation due to gravity. They are known locally as the Santa Ana (southern California), the Mistral (Mediterranean), the Bora (the Adriatic Sea), Oroshi (Japan), Pitaraq (Greenland), and the Williwaw (Tierra del Fuego). The Williwaw and winds traveling over the Antarctic are particularly hazardous, blowing over 100 knots at times.

A fire rainbow is an extremely rare phenomenon that occurs only when the sun is high allowing its light to pass through high-altitude cirrus clouds with a high content of ice crystals.

Also known as the Green Flash. This occurs very briefly before total sunset and after sunrise. It appears as a green flash above the sun that lasts very briefly, generally only a few moments. It is caused by refraction of light in the atmosphere.

This is a very rare phenomenon that involves ball-shaped lightning that moves much slower than normal lightning. It has been reported to be as large as eight feet in diameter and can cause great damage. There are reports of ball lightning destroying whole buildings.
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All refer to phenomena that occur in the upper atmosphere in the regions around thunderstorms. They appear as cones, glows and discharges. They were only discovered last century, because of their placement and their very brief life-span (they last less than a second).
Contributor: Cedestra




















I’m surprised the lenticular cloud didn’t make the list. That is one of the neatist formations I’ve ever seen. But, yes…these are spectacular!
You should mention the fata morgana (after the illusions Morgan Le Fay of the Arthurian legend would create to lure the knights to their fate). Similiar to desert mirages, they appear on polar ice fields. Some report to see forests. I have seen what appeared to be a city. Very eerie. Very beautiful and aptly eclept, fit for any legend.
Thanks so much for posting these amazing photos.
Those things are amazing. my favorite thing was the moonbow. I cant believe that those things are true.
What did you think of them?
Those things are amazing. my favorite thing was the moonbow. I cant believe that those things are true.
What did you think of them?
I’ve witnessed anti-crepuscular rays twice in my life and they were really cool because I knew what it was that I was seeing. Aren’t they fairly rare?
I believe you are mistaken regarding picture #18. If you scrutinize the wispy “clouds” in this photo you will notice that they are identical to jet contrail exhaust. The aerosols and unburnt fuel form the familiar “oil rainbow”. This man-made phenomenon can be observed on the coldest and hottest of days any time during the year. Nature takes second place in this one. Sorry.
COLOURFUL!!! neva heard or seen anything like it
I find noctilucent clouds and the Aurora Borealis especially beautiful.
Mine 2!lol
#7 Are you kidding me?
Besides #7, wonderful shots!
very cool! I didn’t know some of these things existed. I’m from KY, tried to see the moonbow but wasn’t lucky that night.
I find it really hard to believe that Fire Rainbows are “extremely rare”. I’ve seen them countless times here in Oregon, more often than I’ve seen Halos, but they truly amazing none the less.
Fire Rainbows they truly amazing none the less. they are almost as amazing as #13
We are doomed.
i have a few pictures of a luminescent (?) or fire cloud. at first i thought it was chemicals in the air but had to look it up on the internet.
it was odd to see
I honestly think if I saw the mammatus clouds, I’d either crap my pants or make a run for the nearest cathedral. That stuff LOOKS like the wrath of God!!!
Spooky!
I haven’t seen any of these. How sad is that? *will now endeavour to see them all*
carpe_noctem – you’re somewhat atheist? How does that work?
Either you believe in a higher being or you don’t…..I’m agnostic myself…
My fave: Lenticular clouds over mountains. Fascinating. Lots of times people thought they were flying saucers.
This non aquatic rain is a fake pic guys! I have tried to find another variant of such a picture but was unable to get….everywhere the same picture comes…..if this was true there would have been lots of pictures available for this phenomena….This picture is tampered and is a crap!
*experiencing weather phenomena daily
I very much enjoyed these pics, would love to learn more about weather phenomena. Thanx
About a month ago we got a really bad storm, and after it, there was this huge ass rainbow across the sky. It was a full arch, it was amazing. My neighbours and I were out taking pictures of it. I couldn’t get the whole thing on my phone, I had to take it in parts. But it was aroudn 6-7 at night, the sky was this funky pink colour, kind of like the milk after you eat Froot Loops, and directly across from the rainbow was the sun setting. so awesome! I went in my car and put on Across the Rainbow Bridge by Amon Amarth and just watched it until it went away. Coolest thing ever!
We had clouds that looked like Mammatus Clouds in NZ yesterday!! it was on the news and everything… haha…
Enjoyed all the photos some very unusual. Where can I send a couple of photos that I don’t understand what they are. I took them during a lightening storm but they are not lightening. If you know where I can send these photos to see if anyone knows what I took pictures of… please let me know Thanks
Anyone with more info about “non-aqeous rain?” I’m a little skeptical about it. The image about it looks somewhat questionable (photoshopped) to me. Sorry…
these photoes are very wonderful and amazing
i liked these photoes
and thats are great information
the fire rainbow is spectacular, I saw it once at a ski resort. I’ve also seen the belt of venus most recently just a couple weeks ago at band camp, the halos I’ve seen several times, Virga and Sun Pillars I see about once a week, unless I understand them wrong, and I believe I might have seen the mammatus clouds once or twice…
i had a book that mentioned non-aqeous rain. it was so hard to believe. probably if it was raining fish a small tornado or gust of wind or something picked them up and made it “rain”
i find weather fasinating no matter what the severity
Mammatus Clouds! OMG!!! my new favorite!!!
Ohh, I’ve seen haloes before.
This list awsome but I have only seen the colored moon out of all of these
learning new things each time i visit
okay. a ring around the moon. that’s not on here. is that considered a halo? because i see this all the time where i’m from and i always wonder what causes it. someone please put an end to my curiosity. =]
Hippie.
Yeah, it’s a halo formed by ice crystals high in the atmosphere. We get them all the time around here too.
Are ball lightnings confirmed to exist?
jfrater~~ LOVE THIS LIST!!im a long time site vister but first time poster.. of all the listers i tend to like your lists the best. keep up the fantabulous work!!! ♥
Hey I’m in 6th grade and we’re making myths in english about stuff like this… THIS IS SOOO AWESOME!!!!!!!!
Does it actually rain fish (or whatever that is)?? that is really… weird and cool!!! How did u get those shots??? wow… All 20 are awesome!!!
wow those shots r pretty kool =) im silly apples friend. yea we r studying this kinda stuff in our class =) how did u get all those awesome pictures????
OMG these pics r da bomb! wow… that sounded lame:). Ok so I am BFFLS with silly apple and spazzy eraser and we TOTALLY ARE doing this in class. So….. these are cool:)
OMG, the fire rainbow has got to be the bridge to fairyland!
I am Libby and I am a retard but btw this information was H E L P F U L!!!
None of the photographers are credited. And some of these are just false. The only two times that raining animals had been “documented” was in the bible (not the most accepted historical record) and a claim in France that it rained frogs, which was never proven.
I’m not trying to be an ass or anything, but it is important to accept a level of responsibility for information posted on the internet as reference material. It seems, judging from your language, that you aren’t an expert in the field of weather, but more like you compiled a list of information from other (UNCREDITED) sources on the internet. If you’re going to do that (which is fine), then it’s considered customary to put where you got your information, who took the photos you used, and make sure you verify your info against other sources. If you can only find a record of something as weird as animals falling from the sky in one place, then it’s fake. Get your ***** together.
And for all you sixth-graders out there reading this information as you would a textbook, go poke around. There are tons of legit, trustworthy sites that will provide you with reliable facts that are still incredibly cool – discovery.com, for example. Enjoy.
Jiblets: Why can’t you try searching? http://books.google.com/books?id=SP6JmM70J8cC&pg=PA195&lpg=PA195&dq=Raining+minnows,+storm&source=bl&ots=oDoLutg48P&sig=FIFplfcmhlrGJQYYaaA4wBx6Ge4&hl=en&ei=oHIDSqynJZvAtwf80biBBw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=18
Jiblets: this is an entertainment site. I have no obligation to do the things you seem to think essential. On the Internet nothing is “customary” – you do what you like – such as create a site like this and allow people like to comment on it.
So – having said that, please tell me which items on this list are fake. As for raining animals:
http://www.wafb.com/Global/story.asp?S=6771977 (rain of worms)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/3582802.stm (BBC report on a rain of fish)
Beautiful. I used that fire rainbow as my desktop for quite awhile. I’m pretty sure it came from Northern Idaho. I also second (third or whatever) lenticular clouds. Here are some that formed over Mt. Rainer in Washington: http://www.komonews.com/weather/blog/35631614.html
Haloes RULE!!!
very helpfull for my homework and quite interesting (~8
glupost
ništa nevalja
bueno te digo que esto esta bueno pero te cogo
putu de mierda l concha de tu madre pedazo de conchudo chupame la pija…… chau amigo
Haven’t seen/experienced hardly any of these. I must take some time out of my day soon and see the Green Ray. Would love to have Non-aqueous Rain. Does anyone know if people ate the fish – after cooking of course.
your right trains are fascinating
no. 13 reminds me of shaving foam thats been sprayed randomly on a surface
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wow, that firewind is like something outta a sci-fi movie XD that the baddies use against the good guys
isnt the animal rain caused by, and correct me if im wrong, or if iv not read the comments yet, the animals being picked up outta the water by very strong winds and then when its rains, or the animals’ wind currents which kept them up drop, then they fall back down?
its what i read in a book somewhere
Im sure i saw a ball of lightning once; i was in my bedroom, looking out and some lightning flashed, and as it did, i closed my eyes and saw the image of it and im pretty certain it was lightning but with a ball at the end of it.
oh and that firewind looks amazing, as if the atmosphere is on fire
A list i was genuinely intruiged upon
very good.
aaah i was right, it was a water spout that picked them up and then dropped them over land
the animals falling that is ^_^
nice list
I’m lucky enough, living in Scotland, to have seen Aurora Borealis out of my window! It was faint, but still very beautiful (:
Some of these are crazy! Those mammatus clouds are insane O:
I just saw the sun pillar outside of my house as the sun was setting. Beautiful I must say.