The movement and decay of ice edge bands in the winter Bering Sea

A study of the movement and decay of ice bands in the Bering Sea carried out in March 1981 is described. A pair of radio transponders mounted on ice floes within a band was tracked and the band motion was compared with that of a satellite-tracked buoy deployed in the ice interior. The results show t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Martin, S., Kauffman, P., Parkinson, C.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1983
Subjects:
48
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19830045129
Description
Summary:A study of the movement and decay of ice bands in the Bering Sea carried out in March 1981 is described. A pair of radio transponders mounted on ice floes within a band was tracked and the band motion was compared with that of a satellite-tracked buoy deployed in the ice interior. The results show that the bands moved away from the interior pack ice at a speed 30 percent greater than that of the interior ice, that the cause of this band acceleration was very likely the wind-wave radiation stress on the upwind side of the band, and that as the bands moved into warmer water, they decayed both by wind-wave erosion of the upwind edge and by bottom melting. The working of the buoys and the method of deployment are described, as are the band shape, trajectory, and decay. By a calculation of the steady state stress balance on the band, it is shown that the radiation stress can account for the velocity increase of the band relative to the ice interior.