Abstract

Sea ice constitutes a major element in the atmospheric, oceanographic and biological regime of the polar regions. Assessment of its fundamental properties requires interdisciplinary investigations on local, regional and global scales. Sea-ice structure and textural parameters of individual ice cores play a key role in such investigations. A proper characterization of sea-ice micro-structure is essential for an adequate classification of ice cores, an understanding of the growth processes of the sampled floe, and the identification of possible relationships between ice texture, and the physical, chemical and biological properties of sea ice. Investigations on ice cores which were obtained during three recent Antarctic expeditions (1983–85) in coastal waters of the eastern and southern Weddell Sea are reported. The basis for a number of physical, chemical and biological investigations is an assessment of the textural characteristics of each sea-ice core. These are derived by inspection of continuous thick sections, supplemented by an analysis of selected vertical and horizontal thin sections. Major results of this study can be summarized as follows: (i) in addition to the common ice classes, another sea-ice type, platelet ice, is identified; it is apparently unique to the coastal waters of Antarctica, near the ice-shelf edge, and (ii) different physical, chemical and biological sea-ice properties vary systematically with and are probably related to / controlled by the ice texture of the cores.

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