INTRODUCTION
It is known that brine of high salinity is present at the surface of thin sea ice, and hence the ice surface is always wet (Zubov 1945, Ono and others 1980). The surface brine is sucked up by capillary action into snow which covers the sea ice. Furthermore, the snow weight depresses the ice, with the resultant rise in waterline. Consequently the brine contained inside the ice body is pushed out onto the surface, to be sucked up additionally into the snow. Thus, the wetness and salinity of the snow increases. Wet snow and slush (snow holding much brine) in many cases refreezes and changes to snow ice. However, there are only a few investigations into the characteristics of snow ice and snow on sea ice (Martin 1979; Takizawa and Wakatsuchi 1982; Takizawa 1983).
This paper describes the results of field experiments conducted to clarify the salinity of the snow cover on sea ice and the formation of snow ice.
OBSERVATIONS
Observation method
The experiments were carried out at Lake Saroma in Hokkaido, Japan, February 1982 to 1984. The lake, a large lagoon, is covered with flat sea ice in winter. A test pool (2 m x 2 m) was made by removing ice blocks from the fast ice sheet. The salinities of newly formed ice in the pool and of the snow covering it were determined. Salinity of the snow cover on the fast ice was also measured.
Snow cover on the ice grown in the pool
In 1983 the test pool began to freeze on the evening of 5 February. On the morning of 6th newly-formed ice was 25 mm thick, its the upper layer snow ice due to snowfall at night (Figure I). The snow cover was 5 mm deep and flooded with brine. The snow had the salinity of 32.5‰, higher than that of sea water (30.68‰). On the following morning, the wet snow was found to have frozen into a snow ice with salinity 21.9‰. This decrease in salinity indicates that a fair amount of brine was excluded while the snow ice formed. Subsequently the snow ice kept salinity of more than 20‰, On the morning of the 10th the ice was covered with snow 75 mm deep. The lower layer of the snow cover was flooded and its salinity was also as high as 32.2‰. On the 11th the wet snow did not freeze, and its salinity was found to have decreased to 21.6‰.
It is noted that dry snow contained salt though the amount was fairly small. This is believed to be due to the contamination of snow samples at the time when they were collected.
Salinity profiles of the snow and snow ice on the pool ice on 14 February and 13 March 1984 are illustrated in Figure 2. The snow on 14 February was wet to full depth. After one month, on 13 March, the lower layer of the wet snow was found to have changed to snow ice having the salinity of 12‰. It is reasonable to expect that the snow ice, just after it was formed, had the salinity of about 20‰ by the analogy to the change from the wet snow to the snow ice shown in Figure 3. This low value of salinity therefore suggests that it decreased gradually with time. Meanwhile the wet snow still kept a salinity of more than 20‰.
Snow cover on the fast ice
Snow samples were collected at several stations on the fast ice in 1982 and 1983. The salinities of wet snow and slush are listed in Table 1. The wet snow had a salinity of more than 20‰ at every station except Station 83-2, where the slush located between the wet snow and the ice had the high salinity of 23.3‰, though the salinity of the wet snow was lower than 20‰.
Figure 3 shows a change in snow salinity with time. On the morning of 9 February the fast ice was covered with snow 18 mm deep. The snow was wet and its salinity was as high as 37‰. Thereafter the salinity decreased rapidly and fell to 21‰ on the llth. The wet snow changed to snow ice on the 13th. The salinities of wet snow and snow ice were almost constant from the llth to the 14th. One month later, on 13 March, the wet snow and snow ice had the salinity of 21°‰ and 20‰ respectively. As for the latter, the salinity was almost the same as one month before, whereas the salinity of snow ice in the pool decreased to as low as 12 ‰ on the same day (see Figure 2). This discrepancy is inexplainable to our satisfaction because of a lack of observation data around 13 March.
It is noticeable that from 12 to 14 February the dry snow had high salinities, particularly reaching as high as 19‰ on the 14th. It is considered that this is because the dry snow really contained much salt, and not attributable to the contamination of snow samples when they were taken.
CONCLUSION
When a thin sea ice is covered with snow, the snow cover is flooded with the brine which is pushed out onto the ice surface. Thus it has the salinity higher than that of sea water. The flooded snow is found next day having frozen into snow ice in some cases. During this time brine exclusion from the snow takes place whether the snow ice is formed or not. As a result, the wet snow or the snow ice has the salinity of a little above 20‰. Thereafter the wet snow keeps the salinity of more than 20‰. On the other hand, a possibility is suggested that the brine in the snow ice is excluded gradually with time.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author gratefully acknowledges the assistance of T Kawamura, M Oi, M Ishikawa and H Fukushi of Sea Ice Research Laboratory in the field work. He also expresses his gratitude to Professor N Ono for his useful comments and critical reading of the manuscript. This work was partly supported by the Grant-in-Aid for Fundamental Scientific Research (56460037) from the Japanese Ministry of Education.