Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - What happened to the weather or animals before the typhoon came?

What happened to the weather or animals before the typhoon came?

Weather changes, for example, the appearance of high clouds: at the outermost edge of a typhoon are cirrus clouds, white feathered or ponytail clouds. When such a cloud appears in a certain direction and gradually thickens into a dense cirrostratus, it indicates that there may be a typhoon approaching. Thunderstorms stop: In summer, there are frequent thunderstorms in mountainous areas and basins. If the thunderstorm stops suddenly, it means that there may be a typhoon approaching.

Animal changes such as: animal omen, cows, sheep, mules and horses don't enter the stables, pigs don't eat, and dogs bite. Ducks don't go into the water and make noise on the shore, but chickens fly up the tree and scream loudly. The snake came out of the hole in the ice and snow, and the mouse ran with the mouse in its mouth. The rabbit jumped and bumped, and the fish jumped into the water. Bees are moving noisily, but pigeons are too scared to fly back to their nests.

Brief introduction of typhoon:

Typhoon is a kind of tropical cyclone. Tropical cyclone is a low-pressure vortex that occurs on the surface of tropical or subtropical ocean, and it is a powerful and profound "tropical weather system". In China, tropical cyclones in the South China Sea and the Northwest Pacific are classified into six grades according to the maximum average wind speed near the bottom center, and the wind near the center reaches 12 or above, which is collectively called typhoon.

Broadly speaking, the word "typhoon" is not the intensity of tropical cyclones. Keep the central wind speed per second 17. Tropical cyclones over 2 meters are called typhoons. On informal occasions, "typhoon" even directly refers to the tropical cyclone itself. When the tropical cyclone in the northwest Pacific reaches the intensity of a tropical storm, it is given a name. The name is provided by Typhoon Committee 14 of the World Meteorological Organization.