This paper describes the first results from an experiment to measure the fracture toughness of ice. Two experimental techniques have been used; fracture of pre-notched rectangular specimens in three- and four-point bending, and from the observation of the cracks which form underneath an indenter forced into the ice surface. In the latter test the indenter behaves like a wedge. We have observed that for indenters with large interior angles the plastic zone beneath the indenter may itself behave like a wedge. Data obtained over a range of temperatures has been compared with the little other data available. We find a decrease of fracture toughness as the temperature is lowered, which is the reverse of that observed by H. W. Liu and L. W. Loop.