Abstract
Sub-surface melt pools were discovered during construction of an airfield located on glacier ice in the western part of the McMurdo Ice Shelf, Antarctica. The melt pools occur beneath areas of blue glacier ice and they are impossible to detect by visual examination. They vary in size and shape but are usually 1.0 to 1.5 m deep and span circular areas 10 to 15 m in diameter. Sub-surface melting starts in mid-December at depths of 40 cm or more and it progresses until late January when refreezing begins. The ice cover over melt pools may thin to as little as 7 cm and this creates a serious hazard to aircraft operations.The melt pools are caused by the greenhouse effect of intense solar radiation, low albedo of the blue glacier ice and heat absorption by rock particles and dust. The high-albedo layer of chipped ice and powdered ice that was produced during runway construction was completely successful in preventing sub-surface melting. The thickness of this protective layer appeared to be of little importance, providing it exceeded 3 cm.

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