18O concentrations in sea ice of the Weddell Sea, Antarctica

We present data on ice texture, salinity, and delta-O-18 obtained from identical sections of ice cores during the Winter Weddell Sea Project 1986 on RV Polarstern from July through August 1986, in the longitude range between 5-degrees-W and 7-degrees-E. We find no uniquely definable relationship bet...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lange, M. A., Schlosser, P., Ackley, S. F., Wadhams, P., Dieckmann, Gerhard
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/1880/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.12472
Description
Summary:We present data on ice texture, salinity, and delta-O-18 obtained from identical sections of ice cores during the Winter Weddell Sea Project 1986 on RV Polarstern from July through August 1986, in the longitude range between 5-degrees-W and 7-degrees-E. We find no uniquely definable relationship between delta-O-18 values and ice texture in a particular section. However, most of the snow ice as well as some sections of frazil ice ar found to have negative delta-O-18 concentrations. This is due to varying degrees of admixtures of meteoric ice (snow) and sea-water during formation of snow ice. In contrast to common assumptions, our results seem to indicate that a snow cover contributes positively to sea-ice growth rather than slowing down the overall growth rate. Based on a simple model, we have estimated the contributions of meteoric ice (mean of 3 +/- 3%) and the combined meteoric ice/sea-water fraction (a minimum of 7 +/- 6%) to the total ice thickness for the majority of the sampled floes. Although this is only a moderate contribution to the overall mass balance, in the absence of congelation growth it nevertheless enhances ice growth in general. This hypothesis is dependently supported by our snow- and ice-thickness data (Wadhams and others, 1987), which demonstrate that the depression of the snow/ice interface below the water line (i.e. a negative freeboard) and the formation of snow ice is a common occurrence in the Weddell Sea. Therefore, we hypothesize that the major part of the observed apparent increase in ice thickness between our inbound and outbound tracks of WWSP'86 may not be derived from "regular", thermodynamically driven congelation growth, but rather from the snow-ice component in floes of the Weddell Sea.