Who named the cloud types?
Clouds held a particular fascination for a young Englishman named Luke Howard (1773-1864). His father had sent him to grammar school at Burford, a village to the west of London. But Luke was more interested in the books about nature than in volumes of the Greek and Latin classics. Before 1800, observers spoke of clouds only as “essences” floating in the sky. Clouds had no names and were not well understood. The nature and behavior of atmospheric gases, such as oxygen and nitrogen, were just being investigated in the laboratories of Great Britain and Europe. In Luke Howard’s school years, high-level dust from volcanic eruptions in Iceland and Japan caused brilliant sunrises and sunsets. To Howard’s logical mind, clouds and complicated halos must be the result of cause and effect in the natural order. Luke wanted to know more. At the age of 20, Howard returned to London to work as a pharmacist. As a hobby, he joined a group of scientists, known then as “natural philosophers,” who called