STORMS
  1. Two monsoon thunderstorms develop over Albuquerque, New Mexico at sunset, one with a cloud-to-ground lightning strike caught on camera.
  2. Three separate cloud-to-ground lightning channels are caught illuminated just south of Moriarty, New Mexico on August 9, 2013.
  3. A white tornado is seen over the Oklahoma panhandle on May 31, 2010.
  4. An "elephant trunk" tornado crosses U.S. Highway 385 in southeastern Colorado on May 31, 2010.
  5. A shelf cloud sweeps across the Oklahoma panhandle on June 3, 2008.
  6. A supercell thunderstorm takes shape over golden wheat fields in the Oklahoma panhandle on June 3, 2008.
  7. A low hanging shelf cloud is seen over southwestern Nebraska on June 4, 2008.
  8. A wall cloud and scud clouds develop with a parent supercell over southeastern Colorado.
  9. A funnel cloud and fragments of scud clouds develop with a parent supercell over southeastern Colorado.
  10. Another (second of storm's lifecycle) tornado develops from a cyclic supercell over southeastern Colorado on May 31, 2010.
  11. Vertical supercell structure seen in southeastern Colorado.
  12. Vertical supercell structure seen in southeastern Colorado.
  13. Mesocyclonic, or rotating, updraft over Oklahoma panhandle on May 31, 2010.
  14. A new cumulus updraft, the building block of supercells, forms over central Kansas.
  15. A weak tornado takes shape over west central Oklahoma. Note the dust whirl displaced to the left of the funnel.
  16. Another weak tornado takes shape over west central Oklahoma.
  17. A pronounced shelf cloud develops as a supercell begins to turn outflow dominant, racing over central Oklahoma.
  18. A weak tornado develops in the high country of south central, New Mexico near Corona at 6,800 feet in elevation.
  19. A distant supercell propagates into southeast New Mexico.
  20. A supercell exhibits well-defined structure with a wall cloud in east central New Mexico near Pastura.
  21. Lightning strikes just beyond a distant mesa in central New Mexico.
  22. Dual cloud-to-ground lightning strikes are seen from the foothills in eastern Albuquerque.
  23. A daytime bolt of lightning seen in central New Mexico near Mesita.
  24. A pair of cloud-to-ground lightning strikes seen in central New Mexico.
  25. A wall cloud hangs low and scrapes the floor of south central New Mexico floor in September 2014.
  26. A weak wall cloud takes shape over the El Malpais National Monument in west central New Mexico.