Jason Harris
EF5
Wonder how much checking is usually done for news articles like the following where shelf cloud is claimed
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1281516/Ring-sky-Storm-clouds-form-dramatic-circle-sunset-Hungary.html
when in fact as one of the comments indicates in the "talkback" it's an anvil from a thunderstorm. If there were a shelf cloud it's not visible from this distance of the photo. Any Hungarian chasers who were on that storm or can confirm whether it were actually a supercell?Clouds form a vast ring of Gyoer, 70 miles west of Budapest, Hungary, following a torrential shower and hail storm. The formation is a shelf cloud - a low, horizontal wedge-shaped arcus cloud, associated with a thunderstorm gust front (or occasionally with a cold front, even in the absence of thunderstorms)
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1281516/Ring-sky-Storm-clouds-form-dramatic-circle-sunset-Hungary.html