Pressure ridge (ice)

Hypothetical interaction between two floes, resulting in a pressure ridge —— a linear pile-up of sea ice fragments.
Internal structure of a first-year sea ice ridge, MOSAiC expedition, July 4, 2020.

A pressure ridge, when consisting of ice in an oceanic or coastal environment, is a linear pile-up of sea ice fragments formed in pack ice by accumulation in the convergence between floes.

Such a pressure ridge develops in an ice cover as a result of a stress regime established within the plane of the ice. Within sea ice expanses, pressure ridges originate from the interaction between floes,[note 1] as they collide with each other.[1] Currents and winds are the main driving forces, but the latter is particularly effective when they have a predominant direction.[2] Pressure ridges are made up of angular ice blocks of various sizes that pile up on the floes. The part of the ridge that is above the water surface is known as the sail; that below it as the keel.[note 2] Pressure ridges are the thickest sea ice features and account for up to 30–40% of the total sea ice area[3] and about one-half of the total sea ice volume.[4] Stamukhi are pressure ridges that are grounded and that result from the interaction between fast ice and the drifting pack ice.[5][6] Similar to undeformed ice, pressure ridges can be first-, second-, and multiyear depending on how many melt seasons they managed to survive. Ridges can be formed from ice of different ages, but mostly consist of 20–40 cm thick blocks of thin and young ice.[2]

Internal structure

Although ice pressure ridges vary greatly in shape (which also evolves in time), this diagram (not to scale) shows how a drifting ridge is often idealized.[7][4]
Field example of a pressure ridge. Only the sail is shown in this photograph. The keel is more difficult to document.
Pressure ridge at North Pole, expedition of University of Giessen, April 17, 1990
A pressure ridge in the Antarctic ice near Scott Base, with lenticular clouds in the sky.
Bottom topography of a first-year pressure ridge measured using underwater multibeam sonar during MOSAiC Expedition.

The blocks making up pressure ridges are mostly from the thinner ice floe involved in the interaction, but they can also include pieces from the other floe if it is not too thick.[1] In the summer, the ridge can undergo a significant amount of weathering, which turns it into a smooth hill. During this process, the ice loses its salinity (as a result of brine drainage and meltwater flushing). This is known as an aged ridge.[8] A fully consolidated ridge is one whose base has undergone complete freezing.[8] The term consolidated layer is used to designate the freezing up of the rubble just below the water line.[2] The existence of a consolidated layer depends on air temperature — in this layer, the water between individual blocks is frozen, with a resulting reduction in porosity and an increase in mechanical strength. A keel's depth of an ice ridge is much higher than its sail's height — typically about 3–5 times. The keel is also 2–3 times wider than the sail.[9] Ridges are usually melting faster than level ice, both at the surface[10] and at the bottom.[11] While first-year ridges melt approximately 4 times faster than surrounding level ice,[12] second-year ridges melt only 1.6 times faster than surrounding level ice.[10] Sea-ice ridges also play an important role in confining meltwater within under-ice meltwater layers, which may lead to the formation of false bottoms.[13] Ridges also play an important role in controlling the values of atmospheric drag coefficients.[14]

Thickness and consolidation

One of the largest pressure ridges on record had a sail extending 12 m above the water surface, and a keel depth of 45 m.[1] The total thickness for a multiyear ridge was reported to be 40 m.[15] On average, total thickness ranges between 5 m and 30 m,[4] with a mean sail height that remains below 2 m.[2] The average keel depth of Arctic ridges is 4.5 m. The sail height is usually proportional to the square root of the ridge block thickness. Ice ridges in Fram Strait usually have a trapezoidal shape with a bottom horizontal section covering around 17% of the total ridge width and with a mean draft of 7 m,[16] while ice ridges in the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas have a concave close to triangular shape.[17]

The average consolidated layer thickness of Arctic ridges is 1.6 m. Usually, ridges consolidate faster than level ice because of their initial macroporosity. Ridge rubble porosity (or water-filled void fraction of ridge unconsolidated part) is in the wide range of 10–40%. During winter, ice ridges consolidate up to two times faster than level ice, with the ratio of level ice and consolidated layer thickness proportional to the square root of ridge rubble porosity.[18] This results in 1.6–1.8 ratio of consolidated layer and level ice thickness by the end of winter season.[19] Meanwhile, snow is usually about three times thicker above ridges than above level ice.[20] Sometimes ridges can be found fully consolidated with the total thickness up to 8 m.[21] Ridges may also contain from 6% to 11% of snow mass fraction, which can be potentially linked to the mechanisms of ridge consolidation.[22] Fram Strait ridge observations suggest, that the largest part of ridge consolidation happens during the spring season when during warm air intrusions or dynamic events snow can enter ridge keels via open leads and increase the speed of ridge consolidation.[23] These observations are supported by high snow mass fraction in refrozen leads, observed during the spring season.[24] The ridge consolidation potentially reduces light levels and the habitable space available for organisms, which may have negative ecological impacts as ridges have been identified as ecological hotspots.

Characterization methods

The physical characterization of pressure ridges can be done using the following methods:[2]

Interest for pressure ridges

From an offshore engineering and naval perspective, there are three reasons why pressure ridges are a subject of investigation.[4] Firstly, the highest loads applied on offshore structures operating in cold oceans by drift ice are associated with these features.[29] Secondly, when pressure ridges drift into shallower areas, their keel may come into contact with the seabed, thereby representing a risk for subsea pipelines (see Seabed gouging by ice) and other seabed installations. Thirdly, they have a significant impact on navigation. In the Arctic, ridged ice makes up about 40% of the overall mass of sea ice.[9][3] First-year ridges with large macroporosity are important for the ice-associated sympagic communities and identified as potential ecological hotspots and proposed to serve as refugia of ice-associated organisms.[30]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ A floe is any individual piece of sea ice larger than 20 m (66 ft).
  2. ^ These terms also apply to any floating ice feature, such as icebergs.

References

  1. ^ a b c Weeks, W. F. (2010) On sea ice. University of Alaska Press, Fairbanks, 664 p.
  2. ^ a b c d e Strub-Klein, L. & Sudom, D. (2012). A comprehensive analysis of the morphology of first-year sea ice ridges. Cold Regions Science and Technology, 82, pp. 94–109.
  3. ^ a b Hansen, E., Ekeberg, O. ‐C., Gerland, S., Pavlova, O., Spreen, G., Tschudi, M. (2014), Variability in categories of Arctic sea ice in Fram Strait, American Geophysical Union (AGU)
  4. ^ a b c d Leppäranta, M. (2005). The Drift of Sea Ice. Springer-Verlag, New York, 266 p.
  5. ^ Barnes, P.W., D., McDowell & Reimnitz, E. (1978). Ice gouging characteristics: Their changing patterns from 1975-1977, Beaufort Sea, Alaska. United States Department of the Interior, Geological Survey Open File Report 78-730, Menlo Park, U.S.A., 42 p.
  6. ^ Ogorodov, S.A. & Arkhipov, V.V. (2010) Caspian Sea bottom scouring by hummocky ice floes. Doklady Earth Sciences, 432, 1, pp. 703-707.
  7. ^ Timco, G. W. & Burden, R. P. (1997). An analysis of the shapes of sea ice ridges. Cold Regions Science and Technology, 25, pp. 65-77.
  8. ^ a b http://nsidc.org/cryosphere/seaice/index.html Archived 2012-10-28 at the Wayback Machine.
  9. ^ a b Wadhams, P. (2000). Ice in the Ocean. Gordon and Breach Science Publ., London, 351 p.
  10. ^ a b Perovich, Donald K.; Grenfell, Thomas C.; Richter‐Menge, Jacqueline A.; Light, Bonnie; Tucker, Walter B.; Eicken, Hajo (2003). "Thin and thinner: Sea ice mass balance measurements during SHEBA". Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans. 108 (C3). American Geophysical Union (AGU). doi:10.1029/2001jc001079. ISSN 0148-0227.
  11. ^ a b Amundrud, T. L. (2004), "Geometrical constraints on the evolution of ridged sea ice", Journal of Geophysical Research
  12. ^ Salganik, Evgenii; Lange, Benjamin A.; Katlein, Christian; Matero, Ilkka; Anhaus, Philipp; Muilwijk, Morven; Høyland, Knut V.; Granskog, Mats A. (2023-11-20). "Observations of preferential summer melt of Arctic sea-ice ridge keels from repeated multibeam sonar surveys". The Cryosphere. 17 (11). Copernicus GmbH: 4873–4887. doi:10.5194/tc-17-4873-2023. ISSN 1994-0424.
  13. ^ Salganik, Evgenii; Katlein, Christian; Lange, Benjamin A.; Matero, Ilkka; Lei, Ruibo; Fong, Allison A.; Fons, Steven W.; Divine, Dmitry; Ogiier, Marc; Castellani, Giulia; Bozzato, Deborah; Chamberlain, Emelia J.; Hoppe, Clara J.M.; Muller, Oliver; Gardner, Jessie.; Rinke, Annette; Pereira, Patric Simões; Ulfsbo, Adam; Marsay, Chris; Webster, Melinda A.; Maus, Sönke; Høyland, Knut V.; Granskog, Mats A. (2023). "Temporal evolution of under-ice meltwater layers and false bottoms and their impact on summer Arctic sea ice mass balance". Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene. 11 (1). doi:10.1525/elementa.2022.00035. hdl:10037/30456.
  14. ^ Mchedlishvili, Alexander; Lüpkes, Christof; Petty, Alek; Tsamados, Michel; Spreen, Gunnar (2023-09-21). "New estimates of pan-Arctic sea ice–atmosphere neutral drag coefficients from ICESat-2 elevation data". The Cryosphere. 17 (9). Copernicus GmbH: 4103–4131. doi:10.5194/tc-17-4103-2023. ISSN 1994-0424.
  15. ^ Johnston, M., Masterson, D. & Wright, B. (2009). Multi-year ice thickness: knowns and unknowns. Proceedings of the 20th International Conference on Port and Ocean Engineering under Arctic Conditions (POAC), Luleå, Sweden.
  16. ^ Ekeberg, Ole-Christian; Høyland, Knut; Hansen, Edmond (January 2015). "Ice ridge keel geometry and shape derived from one year of upward looking sonar data in the Fram Strait". Cold Regions Science and Technology. 109: 78–86. doi:10.1016/j.coldregions.2014.10.003. ISSN 0165-232X.
  17. ^ Metzger, Andrew T.; Mahoney, Andrew R.; Roberts, Andrew F. (23 December 2021). "The Average Shape of Sea Ice Ridge Keels". Geophysical Research Letters. 48 (24). doi:10.1029/2021GL095100. eISSN 1944-8007. ISSN 0094-8276.
  18. ^ Leppäranta, M., Hakala, R. (1992), "The structure and strength of first-year ice ridges in the Baltic Sea", Cold Regions Science and Technology
  19. ^ Salganik, E., Høyland, K. V., Maus, S. (2020), "Consolidation of fresh ice ridges for different scales", Cold Regions Science and Technology
  20. ^ Itkin, P., Hendricks, S., Webster, M., Albedyll, L. von, Arndt, S., Divine, D., Jaggi, M., Oggier, M., Raphael, I., Ricker, R., Rohde, J., Schneebeli, M., Liston, G. E. (2023), "Sea ice and snow characteristics from year-long transects at the MOSAiC Central Observatory", Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
  21. ^ Marchenko, A. (2022), Thermo-Hydrodynamics of Sea Ice Rubble, Springer International Publishing
  22. ^ Lange, B. A., Salganik, E., Macfarlane, A., Schneebeli, M., Høyland, K., Gardner, J., Müller, O., Divine, D. V., Kohlbach, D., Katlein, C., Granskog, M. A. (2023), "Snowmelt contribution to Arctic first-year ice ridge mass balance and rapid consolidation during summer melt", Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
  23. ^ Salganik, E; Lange, BA; Itkin, P; Divine, D; Katlein, C; Nicolaus, M; Hoppmann, M; Neckel, N; Ricker, R; Høyland, KV; Granskog, MA (2023). "Different mechanisms of Arctic first-year sea-ice ridge consolidation observed during the MOSAiC expedition". Elem Sci Anth. 11 (1). University of California Press. doi:10.1525/elementa.2023.00008. hdl:10037/29890. ISSN 2325-1026.
  24. ^ Clemens‐Sewall, D; Polashenski, C; Frey, MM; Cox, CJ; Granskog, MA; Macfarlane, AR; Fons, SW; Schmale, J; Hutchings, JK; von Albedyll, L; Arndt, S; Schneebeli, M; Perovich, D (2023-06-23). "Snow Loss Into Leads in Arctic Sea Ice: Minimal in Typical Wintertime Conditions, but High During a Warm and Windy Snowfall Event". Geophysical Research Letters. 50 (12). American Geophysical Union (AGU). doi:10.1029/2023gl102816. ISSN 0094-8276.
  25. ^ Leppäranta, M., Lensu, M., Kosloff, P., Veitch, B. (1995), "The life story of a first-year sea ice ridge", Cold Regions Science and Technology
  26. ^ Kharitonov, V. V. (2008), "Internal structure of ice ridges and stamukhas based on thermal drilling data", Cold Regions Science and Technology
  27. ^ Salganik, E., Høyland, K. V., Shestov, A. (2021), "Medium-scale experiment in consolidation of an artificial sea ice ridge in Van Mijenfjorden, Svalbard", Cold Regions Science and Technology
  28. ^ Itkin, P., Hendricks, S., Webster, M., Albedyll, L. von, Arndt, S., Divine, D., Jaggi, M., Oggier, M., Raphael, I., Ricker, R., Rohde, J., Schneebeli, M., Liston, G. E. (2023), "Sea ice and snow characteristics from year-long transects at the MOSAiC Central Observatory", Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
  29. ^ Ervik, Åse; Nord, Torodd S.; Høyland, Knut V.; Samardzija, Ilija; Li, Hongtao (2019). "Ice-ridge interactions with the Norströmsgrund lighthouse: Global forces and interaction modes". Cold Regions Science and Technology. 158: 195–220. doi:10.1016/j.coldregions.2018.08.020. ISSN 0165-232X.
  30. ^ Fernández-Méndez, M., Olsen, L. M., Kauko, H. M., Meyer, A., Rösel, A., Merkouriadi, I., Mundy, C. J., Ehn, J. K., Johansson, A. M., Wagner, P. M., Ervik, Å., Sorrell, B. K., Duarte, P., Wold, A., Hop, H., Assmy, P. (2018), "Algal Hot Spots in a Changing Arctic Ocean: Sea-Ice Ridges and the Snow-Ice Interface", Frontiers in Marine Science
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