Introduction
Scale effects are very important in determining the loads exerted by icebergs on offshore structures. These effects correspond to a decrease in average pressure with increase in contact area (e.g. Reference Lavrov and YakovlevLavrov, 1973; Reference Johnson and BenoitJohnson and Benoit, 1987) and are related to brittle failure of the ice. The latter is, in turn, affected by the internal structure: crystal shape, size and orientation, air inclusions, layering, and ice veins.
Another conspicuous feature characterizing iceberg ice is what appears to be fracture patterns (Fig. 1). These are readily noticeable in hand specimens, and commonly occur as a number of sets of fractures cross-cutting each other at various angles. Although they are not crevasses or open fissures, they may represent a pre-existing structural flaw that is likely to promote crack propagation. There is currently little information available on these features. Reference Ragle, Blair and PerssonRagle and others (1964) describe glacial ice in cores extracted from the Ward Hunt Ice Shelf in northernmost Canada. Healed fractures and faults were noted from the presence of recrystallized, elongated grains or “planar orientations of sheets of bubbles marking the ‘ghost’ fracture” (p.50). Reference Gammon, Gagnon, Bobby and RussellGammon and others (1983) looked at porosity, internal cracks and grain structure in five grounded icebergs, and reported cracks that apparently occurred after calving. A number of other studies have provided a physical description of iceberg ice (Reference Arockiasamy, El-Tahan, Swamidas, Russell and ReddyArockiasamy and others, 1983; Reference Jeffries, Sinha and SackingerJeffries and others, 1990, Reference Jeffries, Serson, Krouse and Sackinger1991; Reference Poplin and RalstonPoplin and Ralston, 1992; Reference Masterson, Nevel, Johnson, Kenny and SpencerMasterson and others, 1993; Reference Gagnon and GammonGagnon and Gammon, 1995; Reference Barrette, Sinha and AgrawalBarrette and Sinha, 1996), but they have not addressed the nature of these planar features. The purpose of this paper is to provide additional information on this subject.
Ice Preparation and Photography
The iceberg ice used in these investigations was purchased from an iceberg-harvesting company in St John’s, and was collected from an iceberg grounded near the northeastern coastline of Newfoundland in spring 2000. The ice was delivered to us in blocks of irregular shape, averaging 500 mm in maximum dimension. The “double-microtoming” technique of Reference SinhaSinha (1977) was used to prepare thin sections of the ice, with the difference that we chose to produce thicker sections (about 10 mm) in order to better decipher the internal structure of the ice. The observations were made on approximately 20 sections obtained from various blocks.
Photographs of these sections were taken between crosspolarized filters or in plain transmitted light, with and without light reflected from one side (to bring out free surfaces such as cracks and bubbles). A macro-lens and a bellows focusing attachment allowed magnifications up to 15×.
Observations
The internal structure did not show a large variation in texture or grain-size. It had a typical glacial texture, with interlocking grains and serrated boundaries (Fig. 1). The longest dimension of all crystals was, on average, approximately 10 mm. The largest grain encountered exceeded 50 mm. Evidence of grain elongation was observed in only one thin section. Air inclusions (bubbles) were abundant in all specimens. In cross-sections, the bubbles were either spherical, ovoid or had an irregular shape. An average density of 0.895 g mL−1 was obtained from 17 specimens (Reference Barrette and JordaanBarrette and Jordaan, in press). The size of the air inclusions ranged from a fraction of a millimetre (below the resolution of our observations) to a maximum of 5 mm. The elongated bubbles were up to several millimetres in length, with a preferred orientation varying from weak to very distinct.
Ice veins varying in thickness from a few millimetres to a maximum of about 30 mm were common. Identified by their low air content, they were therefore less opaque than the surrounding ice (Fig. 1). In hand specimens and when observed on the surface of an iceberg, these veins are normally blue in colour against a white matrix. The occurrence of a layer of air inclusions at equal distance from the walls of the vein was also typical. All veins were planar, with the exception of one that displayed a few tight folds.
Planar features
Figure 2 shows a close-up view of a few sets of planar features crossing each other at various angles. The width of these features as they appear on the photographs is that of their projection onto the plane of observation. The shallower the inclination with respect to this plane (indicated by a strike-and-dip symbol in Figures 4–7), the wider they appear. They vary in true thickness from a thin hairline surface to considerably thicker planar zones (up to 3–4 mm).
The thickest planar features are the most conspicuous at the scale of the hand specimen. They consist of millimetresized air bubbles which, as seen in thin section, are aligned in, but sparsely distributed along, that plane (Figs 1 and 3). Thinner planes consist of planar arrays of much smaller air bubbles with a clearly defined spherical shape (Fig. 4). Their distribution varies from random to orderly in a series of rows. Some of the thinnest planes (Fig. 5), the details of which could not be deciphered at the resolution used in this study, resemble the recent crack shown in Figure 3. Figures 6 and 7 show two intersecting planar features. A displacement at the intersection of two surfaces, that would have indicated lateral slip along the more recent surface, has never been clearly observed. Thus, these are not fault surfaces but are, rather, extensional in nature.
All planar features are seen to cross-cut the ice veins, indicating that the former postdate the latter. It is interesting to note that the folded vein referred to above is cross-cut by another ice vein, which itself is cross-cut by several planar features. This indicates that a sequence of multiple events has affected the ice over time.
Discussion
Various explanations have been offered for the formation of bubble-free ice layers, or “blue ice”, in glaciers. These include ice glands and lenses resulting from percolation of meltwater (Reference Hooke and HudlestonHooke and Hudleston, 1978), infilling of water in crevasses resulting from down-faulting (Reference HambreyHambrey, 1975), recrystallization of water-soaked materials (Reference Allen, Kamb, Meier and SharpAllen and others, 1960), dila-tional fractures generated as a result of shear stresses (Reference HudlestonHudleston, 1989), and “freezing of water ponded in moulin or other cavities on the ice surface” (Reference Allen, Kamb, Meier and SharpAllen and others, 1960, p. 606) . The central layer of air inclusions suggests syntaxial growth (Ramsay and Huber, 1983, p.241), whereby ice crystals grew from the walls toward the centre of the vein, and the dissolved air was pushed ahead of the freezing front.
Planar features were found in virtually all thin sections that were examined as part of this study. They occurred in various orientations and thickness, and were manifested as planar networks of individual air inclusions. The thicker planar features had large bubbles that were more widely distributed. On the other hand, very thin planar features were made up of networks of smaller, more closely spaced air bubbles.
In none of the cases we observed were these inclusions physically linked to form undisturbed, genuine free surfaces, that is, a crack. This may be the case, however, for the thinnest planes, which could not be resolved at the scale of our observations. Moreover, there appears to be a continuum in morphology from the thickest to the thinnest plane (Fig. 8). This raises the possibility that the latter evolved into the former.
Evidence that a crack can lead to the development of a network of air bubbles was provided by Reference Nakawo and WakahamaNakawo and Wakahama (1981). Two mechanisms may be envisaged for the increase in size of gas inclusions in a crystalline matrix (e.g. Trinkaus, 1989; Reference Fichtner, Schroeder and TrinkausFichtner and others, 1991). One is the migration and coalescence of existing inclusions. A non-hydrostatic stress, such as that causing glacial flow, and a large amount of strain could be required for this process to take place (Reference WeertmanWeertman, 1968). The other mechanism is bubble-to-bubble gas transfer, also known as Ostwald ripening (Reference MarkworthMarkworth, 1972; Reference Fichtner, Schroeder and TrinkausFichtner and others, 1991). Either process will lead to crack healing. Such cracks would be analogous to joints in rocks, in that they would be caused by the release of elastically stored stresses (Ramsay and Huber, 1983, p. 235). Thermal gradients in the ice and wave or tide activity are potential sources of such stresses.
Some of the earlier ice veins may have developed prior to calving. This is undoubtedly the case for the folded vein. The later ones, however, may have formed afterward. All healed fracture surfaces, on the other hand, would have to develop late in the history of the ice, either shortly before iceberg calving or afterward. Otherwise, they would have been affected by deformation during glacial flow. It is conceivable that the ice veins and the healed fracture surfaces we observed in this study were generated before and after calving, respectively. This would explain why the fracture surfaces all appear to have occurred later than the veins.
A test program, involving beam bending of the ice described in the present study, was conducted at Memorial University to see if and how the planar features affected flexural strength (Barrette and Jordaan, www.chc.nrc.ca/english/Cold%20Regions/PERD, Report 4-78). The results were inconclusive. However, they did suggest an increase in strength with a decrease in grain-size and a decrease in the amount of air inclusions.
Conclusion
Icebergs contain planar features that look like fracture patterns to the unaided eye. Close-up views of these features show that they are defined by a planar network of air inclusions varying in size and spatial distribution. There may be a continuum between the thinner features, closely resembling a fracture plane, and the thickest ones, which are made up of coarser, more sparsely distributed air inclusions. One possibility is that the former evolved into the latter by the progressive increase in size of the air inclusions occurring along the plane, through migration and coalescence or through a process known as Ostwald ripening. Either process results in what is referred to as crack healing. Cross-cutting relationships consistently indicate that the healed fracture surfaces we observe in our specimens postdate the formation of ice veins. These fractures are thought to have formed either shortly before iceberg calving, or afterward.
Acknowledgements
The experimental work presented in this report was done with the assistance of T. Mackey. S.J. Jones allowed us access to the Institute for Marine Dynamics, National Research Council of Canada, St John’s, where A. Bugden provided the necessary logistical support. Funding from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), the Government of Canada through the Program on Energy Research and Development (PERD), and the Canada–Newfoundland Offshore Development Fund is gratefully acknowledged. The manuscript benefited from comments by two anonymous referees and the assistance of M. A. Lange as Scientific Editor.