Storm Gertrude may be causing a lot of traffic chaos and delay misery this morning but residents of the north-east awoke to this magical site in the sky.
Aberdeen Astronomical Society uploaded this incredible timelapse video taken by Neal Weston to their Facebook page today.
The cloud is seen shining brightly through the morning sunlight and vanishing moments later.
Nacreous clouds, sometimes called mother-of-pearl clouds, are rare but once seen are never forgotten.
(Click here for a video of the cloud above Stonehaven)
They are mostly visible within two hours after sunset or before dawn when they blaze unbelievably bright with vivid and slowly shifting iridescent colours.
They are filmy sheets slowly curling and uncurling, stretching and contracting in the semi-dark sky. Compared with dark scudding low altitude clouds that might be present, nacreous clouds stand majestically in almost the same place – an indicator of their great height.
They need the very frigid regions of the lower stratosphere some 15 – 25 km (9 -16 mile) high and well above tropospheric clouds. They are so bright after sunset and before dawn because at those heights they are still sunlit.
(Click here for pictures sent in by our readers)
They are seen mostly during winter at high latitudes like Scandinavia, Iceland, Alaska and Northern Canada. Sometimes, however, they occur as far south as England. They can be less rare downwind of mountain ranges. Elsewhere their appearance is often associated with severe tropospheric winds and storms.
Nacreous clouds far outshine and have much more vivid colours than ordinary iridescent clouds which are very much poor relations and seen frequently all over the world.