Ferris said this was caused by an anti-crepuscular ray - which happens when the light comes through a gap in the clouds back towards the sun.
“Sunlight comes through a gap in the clouds behind where the photo is taken, and although it may look as if the sunlight is making a ‘V’ that’s all a perspective thing.
“Those lines are in fact parallel.”
Although the dark and lights edges appear to be converging in the sky, the lines are actually perfectly parallel.
“People are seeing so far into the distance that the lines appear to meet.”
Ferris said Metservice had been sent in lots of pictures of the mammatus clouds from people around Whanganui.
Eva de Jong is a reporter for the Whanganui Chronicle covering health stories and general news. She began as a reporter in 2023.