Distribution, morphology and structure of sea ice pressure ridges in the Baltic Sea

The first ridges in winter were observed to build in the northeastern part of the Bothnian Bay in November. The probability of occurrence of ridges was the highest in March which varied yearly up to 90-100% in the Bothnian Bay and around 10-20% in the northern parts of the Baltic Proper. The last ri...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Paula Kankaanpää
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Geographical Society of Finland 1997
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/3449f727017b415b8350c733afa99b12
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:3449f727017b415b8350c733afa99b12 2023-05-15T18:19:00+02:00 Distribution, morphology and structure of sea ice pressure ridges in the Baltic Sea Paula Kankaanpää 1997-02-01 https://doaj.org/article/3449f727017b415b8350c733afa99b12 en eng Geographical Society of Finland 1798-5617 https://doaj.org/article/3449f727017b415b8350c733afa99b12 undefined Fennia: International Journal of Geography, Vol 175, Iss 2 (1997) geo envir Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 1997 fttriple 2023-01-22T19:33:49Z The first ridges in winter were observed to build in the northeastern part of the Bothnian Bay in November. The probability of occurrence of ridges was the highest in March which varied yearly up to 90-100% in the Bothnian Bay and around 10-20% in the northern parts of the Baltic Proper. The last ridges were found in the central part of the Bothnian Bay in May. Ridges increased level ice thickness on average by 6-14 cm equivalent ice thickness in the Bothnian Bay, and 2-4 cm in the Bothnian Sea and in the Gulf of Finland. The maximum average equivalent thickness was found in northeastern Bothnian Sea, which was 80 cm in March. During severe winters the amount of ridges was from 5 to 10 times bigger than in an average winter. Ridges were commonly found in as south as the latitude of Gotland and Gulf of Riga during severe winters. An ideal conclusive model of pressure ridges was made according to morphological field measurements carried out in 73 ridge sails (mean height 0.8 m) and 14 entire ridges (mean height 1.3 m and depth 8.4 m). The ice properties, salinity, density and brine content in ridges were measured and microscale structure of the samples were studied. The sail height and keel depth correlated. The mean ratio of keel depth to sail height was 6.3 varying between 2.6–10. The keel width could not be determined according to the sail dimensions. Mean ratio of keel to sail width was 12.5. The mean slope angle of the sails higher than 0.5 m was 21°. The mean keel slope angle was 29° and the mean slope angle of their sails was 26°. Accumulated snow next to ridge sails smoothened the surface profile 4°. The sail height did not correlate with the steepness of its slopes. The average total porosity of the ridges could be kept as a constant value of 30%. The sail porosity was smaller (20%) than the keel porosity (30%). The frozen nucleus inside the ridge was averagely 0.3 times thicker than level ice around the ridge, although the deviation was large. It was mainly formed from rafted ice blocks which had frozen ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Sea ice Unknown
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic geo
envir
spellingShingle geo
envir
Paula Kankaanpää
Distribution, morphology and structure of sea ice pressure ridges in the Baltic Sea
topic_facet geo
envir
description The first ridges in winter were observed to build in the northeastern part of the Bothnian Bay in November. The probability of occurrence of ridges was the highest in March which varied yearly up to 90-100% in the Bothnian Bay and around 10-20% in the northern parts of the Baltic Proper. The last ridges were found in the central part of the Bothnian Bay in May. Ridges increased level ice thickness on average by 6-14 cm equivalent ice thickness in the Bothnian Bay, and 2-4 cm in the Bothnian Sea and in the Gulf of Finland. The maximum average equivalent thickness was found in northeastern Bothnian Sea, which was 80 cm in March. During severe winters the amount of ridges was from 5 to 10 times bigger than in an average winter. Ridges were commonly found in as south as the latitude of Gotland and Gulf of Riga during severe winters. An ideal conclusive model of pressure ridges was made according to morphological field measurements carried out in 73 ridge sails (mean height 0.8 m) and 14 entire ridges (mean height 1.3 m and depth 8.4 m). The ice properties, salinity, density and brine content in ridges were measured and microscale structure of the samples were studied. The sail height and keel depth correlated. The mean ratio of keel depth to sail height was 6.3 varying between 2.6–10. The keel width could not be determined according to the sail dimensions. Mean ratio of keel to sail width was 12.5. The mean slope angle of the sails higher than 0.5 m was 21°. The mean keel slope angle was 29° and the mean slope angle of their sails was 26°. Accumulated snow next to ridge sails smoothened the surface profile 4°. The sail height did not correlate with the steepness of its slopes. The average total porosity of the ridges could be kept as a constant value of 30%. The sail porosity was smaller (20%) than the keel porosity (30%). The frozen nucleus inside the ridge was averagely 0.3 times thicker than level ice around the ridge, although the deviation was large. It was mainly formed from rafted ice blocks which had frozen ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Paula Kankaanpää
author_facet Paula Kankaanpää
author_sort Paula Kankaanpää
title Distribution, morphology and structure of sea ice pressure ridges in the Baltic Sea
title_short Distribution, morphology and structure of sea ice pressure ridges in the Baltic Sea
title_full Distribution, morphology and structure of sea ice pressure ridges in the Baltic Sea
title_fullStr Distribution, morphology and structure of sea ice pressure ridges in the Baltic Sea
title_full_unstemmed Distribution, morphology and structure of sea ice pressure ridges in the Baltic Sea
title_sort distribution, morphology and structure of sea ice pressure ridges in the baltic sea
publisher Geographical Society of Finland
publishDate 1997
url https://doaj.org/article/3449f727017b415b8350c733afa99b12
genre Sea ice
genre_facet Sea ice
op_source Fennia: International Journal of Geography, Vol 175, Iss 2 (1997)
op_relation 1798-5617
https://doaj.org/article/3449f727017b415b8350c733afa99b12
op_rights undefined
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