Depositional environment of the snow cover on West Antarctic pack-ice floes

Abstract
The depth, density, load and isotopic (δ18O) composition of the snow cover on pack-ice floes were measured in late austral summer 1992 in the eastern Ross, Amundsen and western Bellingshausen Seas. Snow-density values commonly exceeded 350 kg m-3and some were as high as 500 kg m-3. The densification of the snow occurs quickly and is attributed to a windy environment. The high density and sometimes considerable depth of the snow on the floes accounts for loads of as much as 700 kg m-2and resultant sea-water flooding of the underlying sea ice. Lower mean δ18O values in the Ross/Amundsen Seas snow cover suggest that the region might have a cooler climate than the Bellingshausen Sea region. Snow depths on floes in the Bellingshausen Sea region were lower than those in the Ross/Amundsen Seas region, because the Bellingshausen Sea floes were first-year ice. Possible annual units in the isotope profiles of snow, as much as 2m deep, indicate that floes in the Ross/Amundsen Seas region were 2-3 years old.