Abstract
Previous studies have established that, together with the development of a preferred crystal-orientation fabric in ice undergoing creep deformation to high strains, there also develops a tertiary equilibrium crystal size, i.e. the crystal size, rather than affecting the creep rate, is a result of the deformation to large strains. Equilibrium crystal size is considered here as a “balance” between crystal growth with time as a function of temperature and crystal change as a result of temperature dependent deformation. The temperature effects in these two processes (Arrhenius relation) are similar and consideration of the activation energies for the two processes indicates that it may be appropriate to cancel them, yielding a dependence of equilibrium crystal size on stress alone. The results from laboratory experiments of steady-state crystal size plotted as a function of stress support the above proposition. The possibility of using the relationships between steady-state crystal size and deviatoric stress as a polar ice-mass piezometer is discussed.

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