A Field Study of Brine Drainage and Oil Entrainment in First-Year Sea Ice
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Glaciology
- Vol. 22 (88) , 473-502
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022143000014477
Abstract
From field observations this paper describes the growth and development of first-year sea ice and its interaction with petroleum. In particular, when sea ice initially forms, there is an upward salt transport so that the ice surface has a highly saline layer, regardless of whether the initial ice is frazil, columnar, or slush ice. When the ice warms in the spring, because of the eutectic condition, the surface salt liquifies and drains through the ice, leading to the formation of top-to-bottom brine channels and void spaces in the upper part of the ice. If oil is released beneath winter ice, then the oil becomes entrained in thin lenses within the ice. In the spring, this oil flows up to the surface through the newly-opened brine channels and distributes itself within the brine-channel feeder systems, on the ice surface, and in horizontal layers in the upper part of the ice. The paper shows that these layers probably form from the interaction of the brine drainage with the percolation of melt water from surface snow down into the ice and the rise of the oil from below. Finally in the summer, the oil on the surface leads to melt-pond formation. The solar energy absorbed by the oil on the surface of these melt ponds eventually causes the melt pond to melt through the ice, and the oil is again released into the ocean.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Preferred crystal orientations in the fast ice along the margins of the Arctic OceanJournal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 1978
- Effects of Oil Under Sea IceJournal of Glaciology, 1974
- Salt rejection by sea ice during growthJournal of Geophysical Research, 1970