No but an updraft (hurricane) has been known to pick up small frogs or even fish, which later rains down.
2007-02-12 22:09:32
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answer #1
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answered by aussie1_1950 2
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I dont think so, a cloud has always been defined as droplets of liquid or frozen water, never as a mass of ice which the cloud would have to be to support anything as heavy as a human.. So I should think that even for the most dense clouds, the answer is no.
2007-02-13 04:44:10
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answer #2
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answered by chisi m 1
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When I observed the dark afternoon sky during my break earlier, I saw how dark and scary the clouds looked. I am assuming that it would carry a human because they seem like something to sit on.
Cumulus clouds only hold evaporated water from the Earth's surface. As a result the evaporated water turns into water droplets becoming rain or snow.
The only possible cloud that can carry a human or animal's weight is a hurricane or a tornado...and by George if I ever got caught in those things, I wouldn't be alive.
2007-02-13 03:48:17
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answer #3
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answered by Agent319.007 6
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Liquid water is barely dense enough to support the weight of a human. Vapor water is much less dense than liquid water. To get a cloud to support the weight of a human, you'd have to 'densen' up the cloud to something much more dense.
If you compress air that has condensation, it will cause the water to precipitate back to a liquid (i.e. rain).
2007-02-13 03:39:56
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answer #4
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answered by Jack Schitt 3
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Updrafts in thunderstorms could support a human on rare occasions but a cloud could not. The inside of a cloud is like the inside of a fog.
2007-02-13 06:45:03
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answer #5
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answered by tentofield 7
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In short, no. If the clould were that dense, it would rain.
2007-02-13 03:31:50
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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not unless you are in outer space, muahahahaahahaha
2007-02-13 03:52:24
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answer #7
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answered by blitzza17 2
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not unless you are a carebear.
2007-02-13 03:34:31
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answer #8
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answered by dzr0001 5
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