"thin, wisplike strands"@en . "Cirrus clouds are characterized by thin, wisplike strands, often accompanied by tufts, leading to their common (non-standard) name of mare's tail. Sometimes these clouds are so extensive that they are virtually indistinguishable from one another, forming a sheet of cirrus called cirrostratus. Sometimes convection at high altitudes produces another form of cirrus called cirrocumulus, a pattern of small cloud tufts which include droplets of supercooled water. Many cirrus clouds produce hair like filaments made of the heavier ice crystals that precipitate from them. These \"fall streaks\", a form of virga, often indicate the difference in the motion of air (wind shear) between the upper part of the cirrus cloud and the air below it. Sometimes the top of the cirrus cloud is moving rapidly above a slower layer of air, or the streak is falling into a faster moving lower layer. The directions of these winds can also vary."@en . "Above 7000"@en . . "Cirrus"@en . "Ci"@en . . "Cirrus cloud"@en . . "high"@en . "Cirrus clouds are characterized by thin, wisplike strands, often accompanied by tufts, leading to their common (non-standard) name of mare's tail. Sometimes these clouds are so extensive that they are virtually indistinguishable from one another, forming a sheet of cirrus called cirrostratus. Sometimes convection at high altitudes produces another form of cirrus called cirrocumulus, a pattern of small cloud tufts which include droplets of supercooled water."@en . . . . "Above 23,000"@en . "A sky filled with cirrus clouds."@en . "Cirrus cloud"@en . "CirrusField-color.jpg"@en . . . "No"@en . . .