A Cloud Shadow Sunrise
			
		
		
			Credit & Copyright:  
Kee Hinckley
		
		
			What could cause a ray of dark?  
Such a ray was 
caught in spectacular fashion above the 
Florida Everglades 
two years ago. 
The cause is something surprisingly familiar: a 
shadow.  
The gold-tinged cloud near the horizon 
blocks sunlight from 
reflecting off air behind the cloud, 
making that column of air appear 
unusually dark.  
Cloud shadows can be thought of the 
inverse of the more commonly highlighted 
crepuscular rays, where 
sunlight pours though cloud holes.  
Another seemingly opposite phenomenon, a 
sun pillar, involves small 
ice crystals floating high in the atmosphere.