
Observations of banding in first‐year Arctic sea ice
Author(s) -
Cole David M.,
Eicken Hajo,
Frey Karoline,
Shapiro Lewis H.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: oceans
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2003jc001993
Subject(s) - geology , porosity , mineralogy , arctic , nucleation , sea ice , micrography , arctic ice pack , brine , materials science , oceanography , composite material , scanning electron microscope , chemistry , geotechnical engineering , organic chemistry
Horizontal banding features, alternating dark and bright horizontal bands apparent in ice cores and stratigraphic cross sections have long been observed in first‐year sea ice and are frequently associated with bands of high and low brine or gas porosity. Observations on the land‐fast ice near Barrow, Alaska, in recent years have revealed particularly striking banding patterns and prompted a study of their macroscopic and microscopic characteristics. The banding patterns are quantified from photographs of full‐depth sections of the ice, and examples are presented from the Chukchi Sea and Elson Lagoon. Statistics on band spacing are presented, and the growth records for three seasons are employed to estimate their time of formation. These data provide insight into the periodicity of the underlying phenomena. Micrographs are used to examine the microstructural variations associated with various banding features and to quantify the geometry of the constituent brine inclusions associated with high‐ and low‐porosity bands. The micrography revealed that the area fraction of brine inclusions varied by a factor of nearly 3 through the more pronounced high‐ and low‐porosity bands. Vertical micrographs obtained shortly after the materials' removal from the ice sheet showed that significantly larger inclusions form abruptly at the start of the high‐porosity bands and frequently terminate abruptly at the end of the band. Crystallographic observations indicated that the high‐porosity bands supported the nucleation and growth of crystals having substantially different orientations from the very well aligned columnar structure that characterized the bulk of the sheet.