Aufeis

Aufeis

Aufeis (German for "ice on top") is a sheet-like mass of layered ice that forms from successive flows of ground water during freezing temperatures. This form of ice is also called icings or, by the Russian term, naled. According to E. de K. Leffingwell the term was first used in 1859 by A. T. von Middendorff following his observations of the phenomenon in northern Siberia.

Formation of aufeis

Aufeis accumulates during winter along stream and river valleys in arctic and subarctic environments. Aufeis forms by upwelling of river water behind ice dams, or by ground-water discharge. The latter mechanism prevails in high-gradient alpine streams as they freeze solid. Ground-water discharge is blocked by ice, perturbing the steady-state condition, and causing a small incremental rise in the local water table until discharge occurs along the bank at the top of the previously formed ice. Successive ice layers can lead to aufeis accumulations that are several meters thick. Aufeis typically melts out during summer and will form in the same place year after year (Hu and Pollard, 1997).

Humans and aufeis

Sheets of aufeis may block stream channels and cause their flood plains to widen as spring floodwaters are forced to flow around the ice (Harden et al., 1977). Research on aufeis has to a large extent been motivated by the variety of engineering problems the ice sheets can cause (e.g. blocking drainages and causing flooding of roads) (Kane 1981). Culverts and pipelines can actually help to block flow and lead to the development of more extensive aufeis (Williams and Smith, 1989).

Occurrence of aufeis

Sheets of aufeis have been observed in Alaska (Harden et al., 1977; Kane, 1981), Arctic Canada (Veillette and Thomas, 1979; Reedyk et al., 1995; Clark and Lauriol, 1997; Priesnitz and Schunke, 2002), Russia (Sokolov, 1978) and Mongolia (Froelich, 1982; Swanson-Hysell and Dandar, 2005).

References

*Clark, I., and Lauriol, B., 1997, Aufeis of the Firth River basin, northern Yukon Canada: Insights into permafrost hydrogeology and karst: Arctic and Alpine Research, v. 29, no. 29, p. 240-252.
*Froehlich, W., and Slupik, J., 1982, River icings and fluvial activity in extreme continental climate: Khangai Mountains, Mongolia: Proceedings, 4th Canadian Permafrost Conference, p. 203-211.
*Harden, D., Barnes, P., and Reimnitz, E., 1977, Distribution and character of naleds in northeastern Alaska: Arctic, v. 30, no. 1, p. 28-40.
*Hu, X., and Pollard, W., 1997, The hydrologic analysis and modeling of river icing growth, North Fork Pass, Yukon Territory, Canada: Permafrost and Periglacial Processes, v. 8, p. 279-294.
*Kane, D., 1981, Physical mechanics of aufeis growth: Canadian Geotechnical Journal, v. 8, no. 2, p. 186-195.
*Priesnitz, K., and Schunke, E., 2002, The fluvial morphodynamics of two small permafrost drainage basins, northwestern Canada: Permafrost and Periglacial Processes, v. 13, no. 3, p. 207-217.
*Reedyk, S., Woo, M., and Prowse, T., 1995, Contribution of icing ablation to streamflow in a discontinuous permafrost area: Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, v. 32, no. 1, p. 13-20.
*Sokolov, B. L., 1978, Regime of naleds: Permafrost: the USSR contribution to the Second International Conference, National Academy of Sciences, p. 408-411.
*Swanson-Hysell, N. and Dander, E., 2005. Aufeis in the Kharkhiraa Uul. Eighteenth Annual Keck Research Symposium in Geology Proceedings http://keck.wooster.edu/publications/2005_abstracts/mongolia/10swansonAbstractFinal.pdf
*Veillette, J., and Thomas, R., 1979, Icings and seepage in frozen glacio-fluvial deposits, District of Keewatin, NWT: Canadian Geotechnical Journal, v. 16, no. 4, p. 789-798.
* Wanty et al, Aufeis Accumulations in Stream Bottoms in Arctic and Subarctic Environments as an Indicator of Geologic Structure
*Leffingwell, E. de K., 1919, The Canning River region, northern Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 109, 251 p., 6 sheets, scale 1:125,000.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • aufeis — noun A layered mass of ice formed in temperatures below 0ºC., from the freezing of successive flows of ground water over the previously formed layers of ice …   Wiktionary

  • Paradox (артист) — Paradox Имя при рождении Дев Пандья (Dev Pandya) Страна Великобритания Профессии DJ, драм н бейс продюсер Жанры драм н бейс …   Википедия

  • Glacier — This article is about the geological formation. For other uses, see Glacier (disambiguation). The Baltoro Glacier in the Karakoram, Kashmir, Northern Pakistan. At 62 kilometres (39 mi) in length, it is one of the longest alpine glaciers on… …   Wikipedia

  • Ice — This article is about water ice. For the broader concept of ices as used in the planetary sciences, see volatiles. For other uses, see Ice (disambiguation) …   Wikipedia

  • Reeve Aleutian Airways — Infobox Airline airline = Reeve Aleutian Airways logo size =220px IATA = RV ICAO = RVV callsign = Reeve parent = founded = March 24 1947 key people = Robert C Reeve (founder 1st President) Richard D Reeve 2nd President. hubs = Anchorage… …   Wikipedia

  • Icing — can refer to: *Atmospheric icing *Icing (food) *Icing (shipping) *Icing (ice hockey) *Icing by Claire s *A periglacial ice sheet (aufeis) …   Wikipedia

  • Ian Clark — is a professor in the Department of Earth Sciences at the University of Ottawa. His graduate work in isotope hydrogeology was at the University of Waterloo and the University of Paris. [cite web|title=NRSP people: Ian Clark|publisher=Natural… …   Wikipedia

  • Наледь — слой замерзающей или замерзшей воды на поверхности речного льда (речная Н., или тарын) или на земной поверхности. Наиболее крупные Н. в Якутии достигают десятков и сот км2. Геологический словарь: в 2 х томах. М.: Недра. Под редакцией К. Н.… …   Геологическая энциклопедия

  • НАЛЕДЬ — нарост льда, возникающий при замерзании воды, изливающейся на поверхность ледяного покрова или на поверхность земли (Болгарский язык; Български) ледена кора (Чешский язык; Čeština) náleď; námraza (Немецкий язык; Deutsch) Aufeis; Eisansatz… …   Строительный словарь

  • ice in lakes and rivers — Introduction       a sheet or stretch of ice forming on the surface of lakes and rivers when the temperature drops below freezing (0° C [32° F]). The nature of the ice formations may be as simple as a floating layer that gradually thickens, or it …   Universalium

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”