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The dark clouds over open water have long been used by polar explorers and scientists to navigate in sea ice. For example, Arctic explorer Fridtjof Nansen and his assistant Hjalmar Johansen used the phenomenon to find lanes of water in their failed expedition to the North Pole , as did Louis Bernacchi and Douglas Mawson in Antarctica.
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A sea of clouds is an overcast layer of stratocumulus clouds, as viewed from above, with a relatively uniform top which shows undulations of very different lengths resembling waves on the sea. [1] A sea of fog is formed from stratus clouds or fog and does not show undulations. [2] In both cases, the phenomenon looks very similar to the open ocean.
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Mesospheric noctilucent clouds over Estonia. Noctilucent clouds are thin clouds that come in a variety of forms based from about 80 to 85 kilometres (262,000–279,000 ft) and occasionally seen in deep twilight after sunset and before sunrise. [6] [7] Type 1 Veils, very tenuous stratiform; resembles cirrostratus or poorly defined cirrus. Type 2