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Evaporation fogFog produced when sufficient water vapor is added to the air by evaporation. The two common types are steam fog, which forms when cold air moves over warm water, and frontal fog, which forms as warm raindrops evaporate in a cool air mass.
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Evaporation fogThe most localized form of fog, usually forming over lakes and rivers, sometime oceans, when the water is warmer than the air above it. Moisture evaporates from the water and saturates the adjacent layer of air and condenses. This air rises, it evaporates into the dryer air aloft, thus, giving the appearance of a low layer of steam above the water.
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Evaporation fogFog produced when sufficient water vapor is added to the air by evaporation.
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