Themes > Science > Earth Sciences > Hydrology, Meteorology, Climatology > Hydrology > Ice > Ground Ice

 

  • seasonal in temperate climates
  • permanent in cold environments
  • ground ice is present in a variety of forms (Mackay, 1972, World of underground ice, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, vol. 62), but there are two main types:

    • pore (interstitial) ice: freezing of the water in the pore spaces in soil and rock
    • segregated ice: bodies (lenses, wedges, seams, etc.) of pure ice that forms and grow as soil water is diffused towards the lower vapour pressure at the freezing plane

hydrologic significance of ground ice

  1. permafrost
    • permanently frozen ground usually contains ice
    • thus the distribution of permanent ground ice is linked to the distribution of permafrost
    • this water can be stored as ice for tens of thousands of years, i.e., much permafrost and ground ice is relict from the colder climate of the late Pleistocene

  2. seasonally thawed ground
    • in the active layer, water trapped above the permafrost table participates in the hydrological cycle during a short spring and summer

  3. segregated ice
    • develops by attracting water, and thereby depleting the water content of surrounding sediments
    • needle ice is a form of segregated ice that forms on wet ground on cold nights, thereby desiccating the soil surface

  4. lack of baseflow
    • interflow and overland flow from a saturated active layer tend to be the dominant source of runoff, because groundwater is either frozen or trapped below permafrost


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