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TitleGrowth of first-year landfast Antarctic sea ice determined from winter temperature measurements
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2006
AuthorsPurdie, C.R., Langhorne P.J., Leonard G.H., and Haskell T.G.
JournalAnnals of Glaciology
Volume44
Pagination170 - 176
Date Published2006
ISSN02603055 (ISSN)
KeywordsAntarctica, East Antarctica, growth rate, heat flux, McMurdo Sound, Sea ice, temperature effect, temperature gradient, temperature profile, water temperature
AbstractTemperature profiles of first-year landfast sea ice have been recorded continuously over the 2003 winter growth season at McMurdo Sound, Antarctica. The temperature gradients in the ice were used to calculate the growth rate due to conductive heat flux, which is shown to account for only part of the total ice growth. Remaining ice growth must be due to a negative oceanic heat flux. Significantly, this oceanic heat flux is shown to occur episodically, sometimes with sustained daily rates in excess of -30 W m-2. There is no direct correlation between oceanic heat flux and water temperature. Times of increased oceanic heat flux do coincide with the appearance of platelet ice in cores, and appear to account for the growth of 35% of the total platelet ice depth measured in ice cores.
URLhttp://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-34249049180&partnerID=40&md5=0fe1b4eb7e8feb348f8f5e64b9a384d5
DOI10.3189/172756406781811853

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