Introduction
Penitents are the end expression of instabilities that arise during ablation of snow or ice driven by sunlight where relatively flat surfaces are transformed into large blade-like structures (Fig. 1). In our current climate, penitents typically form on mountain glaciers and snowfields in the tropics and subtropics. The formation of penitents is important because the surface roughness of snowfields is a critical determinant of surface albedo, the remote sensing of snowpack properties (Reference Warren, Brandt and HintonWarren and others, 1998; Reference Hudson, Warren, Brandt, Grenfell and SixHudson and others, 2006) and sublimation and melting (Reference Lliboutry, Williams and FerrignoLliboutry, 1999; Reference Corripio, Purves, De Jong, Collins and RanziCorripio and Purves, 2005; Reference Winkler, Juen, Mölg, Wagnon, Gómez and KaserWinkler and others, 2009; Reference CathlesCathles and others, 2011). Understanding where and why penitents form, and the physical processes that are most directly responsible for them, are therefore important steps in understanding high-alpine snowpacks.
Despite Darwin’s speculation that penitents are carved by wind (Reference DarwinDarwin, 1839), it is now widely agreed that the primary driver of penitent formation is sunlight (Reference OdellOdell, 1941; Reference LliboutryLliboutry, 1954; Reference Naruse and LeivaNaruse and Leiva, 1997; Reference BettertonBetterton, 2001; Reference Bergeron, Berger and BettertonBergeron and others, 2006). The basic formation mechanism of penitents, as sketched by Lliboutry (1954), is that geometric focusing of incoming solar radiation causes initial surface undulations to grow. This focusing causes depressions in the surface to receive both direct, incoming insolation and reflected insolation from the surrounding surface. Peaks in the surface only receive direct insolation, and thus do not ablate as quickly as depressions which receive more reflected sunlight. This process leads to the growth of penitent structures. Once initial penitents form, other processes can lead to differential ablation that significantly enhances the growth of penitent features (Reference LliboutryLliboutry, 1954; Reference Kotlyakov and LebedevaKotlyakov and Lebedeva, 1974); however, these processes are secondary, because without sunlight, penitents cannot initiate.
Theoretical and experimental work has shown that radiation can drive the formation of surface roughness in snow. Betterton (2001) showed that an ad hoc treatment of geometric focusing of sunlight described by Lliboutry (1954) causes a flat surface to be unstable to ablation from sunlight perpendicular to the surface, and that perturbations spontaneously grow in amplitude. Similar results were found using different mathematical models and confirmed by observations (Reference Tiedje, Mitchell, Lau, Ballestad and NodwellTiedje and others, 2006; Reference Mitchell and TiedjeMitchell and Tiedje, 2010). Laboratory experiments by Bergeron and others (2006) confirm that small perturbations grow from a horizontal snow surface when illuminated by light directly above the snow surface. These studies did not investigate how the mechanism explains the limited latitudinal extent and east–west orientation of penitents.
Here we extend the work of Betterton (2001) to include large and evolving surface perturbations and varying incidence angles of incoming radiation. The combination of these additions provides insights into the formation mechanism originally put forth by Lliboutry, and shows that his proposed formation mechanism can also be used to explain why penitent formation on flat surfaces is limited to the tropics and subtropics.
Geographic Extent And Orientation Of Penitents
Penitents are observed in a restricted latitudinal range and have a consistent orientation. Reported penitent formation is primarily between 37˚ S (Reference Lliboutry, Williams and FerrignoLliboutry, 1999) and 46˚ N (Reference MatthesMatthes, 1934). First described by Darwin, penitents have since been observed in the Andes (Reference DarwinDarwin, 1839; Reference TrollTroll, 1942; Reference LliboutryLliboutry, 1954; Reference Hastenrath and KociHastenrath and Koci, 1981; Reference Lliboutry, Williams and FerrignoLliboutry, 1999; Reference Corripio, Purves, De Jong, Collins and RanziCorripio and Purves, 2005), Asia (Reference HollandHolland, 1910; Reference OdellOdell, 1941; Reference Kotlyakov and LebedevaKotlyakov and Lebedeva, 1974), North America (Reference MatthesMatthes, 1934; Reference NicholsNichols, 1939; Reference AmstutzAmstutz, 1958), Hawaii (Reference WentworthWentworth, 1940) and Africa (Reference LliboutryLliboutry, 1954; Reference Kaser, Mölg, Cullen, Hardy and WinklerKaser and others, 2010), yet penitents are largely absent from polar snow and ice fields such as in Greenland or Antarctica. There are a few reports in the literature describing observations of penitents in Greenland (Reference OdellOdell, 1941) and Antarctica (Reference Wright and PriestleyWright and Priestley, 1922; Reference Favier, Agosta, Genthon, Arnaud, Trouvillez and GalléeFavier and others, 2011), but it is not clear whether these reports reflect structures on surfaces that are significantly out of horizontal or to what extent debris, dust and other factors are at play.
A ubiquitous property of penitents is their consistent orientation (Reference HollandHolland, 1910; Reference MatthesMatthes, 1934; Reference NicholsNichols, 1939; Reference WentworthWentworth, 1940; Reference OdellOdell, 1941; Reference LliboutryLliboutry, 1954; Reference Kotlyakov and LebedevaKotlyakov and Lebedeva, 1974; Reference Hastenrath and KociHastenrath and Koci, 1981; Reference Naruse and LeivaNaruse and Leiva, 1997; Reference Corripio, Purves, De Jong, Collins and RanziCorripio and Purves, 2005). The troughs and blades of a field of penitents align east–west, such that the faces point equatorward. Naruse and Leiva (1997) report detailed measurements of penitent orientation, showing that the average ridge orientation of penitents is between –10˚ and +20˚ of aligning east–west.
Although it is clear from observations that penitents form predominantly at lower latitudes and with an east–west ridge orientation, these two basic aspects of penitents remain largely unexplained. We use a simplified computational analysis to show that the latitudinal extent and orientation of penitents can be explained by insolation-driven ablation alone. By focusing on a limited set of assumptions, we show that the detailed evolution of the sun’s path through the sky determines both the range and orientation of penitent features. Results from our analysis agree with the observations described above, and provide insight into the mechanism determining the geographic range and orientation of penitents.
Methods
We focus our analysis on intra-surface radiative transfer and the effects of insolation-driven sublimation. We additionally consider the detailed evolution of the sun through the day and year. Our analysis considers a two-dimensional (2-D) snow surface where ablation is determined by diurnally and annually varying insolation received at a particular latitude and orientation. Since penitents are elongated, they are well suited for a 2-D model. In the analysis, we calculate two important quantities: (1) the total energy absorbed as a function of distance along the surface contour and (2) the time evolution of the surface contour. To calculate energy absorption, the time-dependent solar zenith angle and the solar azimuth angle are accounted for. These are used to find the distribution of incident energy on the surface depending on its orientation. The geometry-dependent radiative effects associated with shadowing, multiple reflections and absorption are also treated. To evolve the surface in response to this forcing, we assume that all energy absorbed causes sublimation. Sublimation is assumed to act locally and to ablate the surface of the snow in a direction perpendicular to the surface contour. The domain of our analysis consists of a one-dimensional (1-D) curvilinear contour that represents the snow/air interface. The surface is periodic, such that the first and last node points are the same. Figure 2 depicts the domain and processes included in our analysis. Details of the analysis are described below, and in greater detail by Cathles (2011) and Cathles and others (2011).
The analysis was performed by computing the evolution of an initial sinusoidal roughness profile in response to a 45 day ablation season. Our analysis determines whether this initial surface grows in amplitude or decays to a flat, horizontal surface. We identify parameters that promote amplitude growth with conditions that favor penitent formation. For all results shown, we used an initial condition where the amplitude of the surface perturbation is the same as the wavelength of the perturbation. This ensures that if the amplitude of the surface roughness grows, the resulting surface roughness will have peaks taller than the distance between them, which is consistent with observations of penitent formations (Reference Corripio, Purves, De Jong, Collins and RanziCorripio and Purves, 2005). The detailed evolution of penitents cannot be explained using our analysis, because we limit our consideration to the physical processes described above, and disregard other aspects of snow and ice energy and mass balance.
Radiative transfer analysis
As shown in Figure 2, we consider a 1-D curvilinear contour that represents the ice/air interface of a transverse cross section of a penitent ridge. Distance along the contour (from left to right) is represented by the curvilinear variable s, and horizontal and vertical Cartesian coordinates are represented by x and z, respectively. The domain is periodic, such that the first point along the contour is the same as the last point, and the domain is always arranged such that the end points are the highest points on the contour. This means that all reflection between points on the surface is contained within a single periodic unit of the penitent field. The contour is discretized into 100 segments. This analysis makes several simplifying assumptions of how incident energy reflects from the surface: there is no angular dependence on the reflectivity of the surface, the ice is assumed to be optically opaque, i.e. all light is absorbed or reflected at the interface, and the albedo is uniform at all wavelengths of incident light.
The central physical element of the analysis is the treatment of shortwave energy within the periodic domain. The absorption of incoming solar energy, E a, involves the complexity of multiple reflections that is treated following Pfeffer and Bretherton (1987). The energy emitted by reflection at a point s along the surface Γ, R (s), is expressed as a Fredholm integral equation of the second kind:
where R d(s) is the component of direct incoming energy emitted by reflection from s, is the albedo of the surface material, and F (s, s’) is the fraction of energy leaving some other part of the contour at s’ which is incident on s. Once R(s) is calculated, the absorbed energy, E a(s), is relatively straightforward:
where E d(s) is the energy per unit width absorbed from direct incoming solar radiation. The second term of Eqn (2) integrates all the reflected energy which is incident on point s from all points along the contour. We convert these equations into a system of linear equations for values of the variables at gridpoints along the contour, which we then solve for numerically. Details of these computations have been described elsewhere (Reference CathlesCathles, 2011; Reference CathlesCathles and others, 2011). The important feature of this analysis it that it accounts for all reflections within the periodic domain.
Solar ephemeris in a 2-D plane
A unique feature in our analysis is that we consider the trajectory of the sun through the sky. We follow Walraven (1978) and use spherical trigonometry to determine both the sun’s zenith angle (Θ) and azimuth (ϕ). Because penitents are highly linear features, we restrict our consideration to 2-D features, and thus project the sun’s three-dimensional (3-D) location into the 2-D plane of our simulation. This can be accomplished by converting the azimuth to an azimuth relative to the projected plane, ϕ p. The projected zenith angle is then
The insolation must be reduced to account for the energy passing perpendicular to the 2-D plane of the domain. This is accomplished by defining an intensity factor
Both the 2-D zenith angle and the intensity factor are derived in Cathles (2011).
The atmosphere is assumed to be cloud-free, and the intensity of incoming insolation perpendicular to the beam of light at ground level is fixed at 1000 W m−2. This represents a conservatively large attenuation of the top-of-atmosphere flux of 1365 W m−2 compared to regions where penitents typically form (Reference Corripio, Purves, De Jong, Collins and RanziCorripio and Purves, 2005; Reference Mölg, Cullen and KaserMölg and others, 2009). Observations suggest that 93–95% of incoming light where penitents typically form is direct (Reference Kotlyakov and LebedevaKotlyakov and Lebedeva, 1974; Reference Corripio, Purves, De Jong, Collins and RanziCorripio and Purves, 2005). We thus neglect diffuse light. For simplification, we do not include spectrally dependent reflection and absorption. The start and stop day for each simulation is latitude-dependent, and chosen so that the midpoint of the integration period is the day with maximum solar elevation and our time-step is 15 min. Over the simulation period, the daily average insolation incident on a horizontal surface is a complex function of latitude, but ranges from approximately 320 W m−2 at the equator to 390 W m−2 at the poles. The non-monotonic behavior of this function is due to variations in angle of incidence and length of day (Reference HartmannHartmann, 1994, Fig. 2.6).
Treatment of ablation
Energy transfer in the ice below the surface is not treated (effectively treating the ice as temperate through the full depth of the ice below the surface), and energy-balance terms associated with sensible and latent heat transfer and longwave radiation are neglected. These assumptions are a critical part of the analysis simplifying the problem so that we can conduct a set of experiments that determine how solar radiation controls penitent formation.
It has been observed that penitents form when the dew point remains below the freezing temperature, which implies, at least initially, sublimation is the ice-removal process (Reference LliboutryLliboutry, 1954; Reference Bergeron, Berger and BettertonBergeron and others, 2006). The analysis therefore uses sublimation, not melting, as the ablation process. Results for simulations of melting ice where the water is instantaneously removed from the surface do not significantly change our results. It has been suggested that the development of large penitents requires additional processes such as differential ablation (sublimation on the peaks and melting in the trough) (Reference LliboutryLliboutry, 1954), a cooling breeze on the peaks (Reference MatthesMatthes, 1934), or sediment or ponding of meltwater in the troughs between peaks (Reference Kotlyakov and LebedevaKotlyakov and Lebedeva, 1974). Including these processes would require a detailed microclimate analysis. Our analysis reproduces the observed orientational and latitudinal limits on penitents without including these effects. This indicates that these other effects are of secondary importance.
Given the above assumptions, the ablation rate is calculated at every time-step from the absorbed energy distribution using the following simplification:
where ρ is the density of ice, L is the latent heat of sublimation, and dsi is the length of the segment used to discretize Γ. Assuming that the snow or ice ablates in a direction perpendicular to the surface contour, we can convert the ablation rate to a velocity U for any point located on the contour:
where –n is the into-ice pointing unit vector perpendicular to Γ. The ablation rate is calculated for line segments on the contour Γ, but it is the nodes which must be moved to update the position of Γ. To make this adjustment we adopt the weighted residuals method, the implementation of which is described in detail in Cathles (2011) and Cathles and others (2011). At the end of every time-step we re-mesh using a linear interpolation scheme. This prevents bunching of nodes along the surface, but potentially adds interpolation artifacts such as surface smoothing. We also rearrange the points by shifting the highest node to the first point position in the periodic domain to insure all reflections are contained within one periodic unit.
Results
Depending on latitude, the initial sinusoidal roughness is either enhanced (penitents form) or diminished. Figure 3 shows the growth rate of the amplitude of the surface roughness over a 45 day simulation. Two insets show examples of the surfaces at 35˚ and 75˚ off the equator and show the surface at 7 day intervals (the initial surface contour in the lightest gray, and the darkest gray showing the final ablated surface). At low latitudes, the surface evolves into a series of blade-like peaks and valleys, with increasing amplitude as ablation progresses (Fig. 3 inset). At high latitudes, the amplitude of roughness decays as ablation progresses because the sides of a surface feature intercept more high-solar-zenith-angle radiation than the bottom of the depression. The analysis yields strongly positive growth rates at latitudes up to ~40˚ and weakly positive growth rates up to 55˚, which agrees well with the bulk of the observed penitent fields occurring between 37˚ S and 46˚ N.
The preferred east–west orientation of penitents also emerges naturally from our calculations (Fig. 4). The orientation angle is the alignment of the peaks and troughs as measured from east to west. As the ridge orientation of the penitent field changes, so does the sun’s projection into the perpendicular plane (Fig. 5). For ridge orientations not aligned east–west, the sun’s energy is incident over a broader range of angles. This distributes the absorbed energy more evenly on the surface and inhibits the formation of penitents. Figure 4 compares the growth rate of the amplitude of the surface roughness in our simulations over a 45 day period and across the full range of possible orientation angles to a set of observed orientations of penitents from Glaciar Piloto, Argentina (Reference Naruse and LeivaNaruse and Leiva, 1997). Our analysis finds that, at the latitude of Glaciar Piloto (32˚ S), penitents can only form at an orientation within 30˚ of the east–west direction. This is consistent with observations from Naruse and Leiva (1997) for the region.
Discussion
Surface roughness grows rather than decays when the distribution of incident light is within a narrow range of incident angles. This criterion fails for the polar regions, because there is a bimodal distribution of incident light. Nevertheless, and as an additional proof of the assertion, when the bimodal or widespread distribution of input energy angles is artificially restricted (e.g. by topography, shadowing, non-horizontality, diurnal variations in clouds, etc.), surface roughness features will grow in polar regions too. The fact that penitents are rare in polar regions is an affirmation of the basic theory that penitents require the variation in the angles of incoming solar radiation to be small.
The latitudinal and orientational limitations on penitent formation shown in Figures 3 and 4 result from the same mechanism: the distribution of incident angles of incoming radiation (Fig. 6). At low latitudes, for features with an east– west orientation, incoming energy is primarily incident within a narrow range of angles (Fig. 5a). As shown in Figure 5b, when features are not aligned east–west, the insolation is evenly distributed. While an even distribution does generate geometric focusing of radiation towards the base of a surface perturbation, this effect is not strong enough to counter the ablation along the sides of surface perturbations. Initial surface roughness at low latitudes, when not aligned east–west, will thus decay. At high latitudes, the angles of incoming energy are distributed bimodally (Fig. 5c). This also causes ablation on both sides of initial surface perturbations and induces them to decay. If part of the bimodal illumination from the sun were blocked from the surface, either by the slope of the surface itself, or by the shadow of mountains, penitents could be induced to form at high latitudes, because the remaining portion of insolation would be concentrated into a narrower band of angles of incidence. Penitents could also possibly form with orientations that depart from east–west if the surface were shadowed for parts of a day. While our analysis was not intended as a comprehensive model of penitent structures, the computations we show here do a reasonable job of simulating observed surfaces. Figures 7 and 8 compare sketches of penitents found in the literature with model results. Figure 8 compares a computed result with detailed observations at Glaciar Piloto (32.68 S). Naruse and Leiva (1997) describe the average of 11 penitents: ‘The surface slope on the southern face ranged from about 60 to 858. It is clearly recognized that the slope of the northern face is steeper with a negative angle (overhung) and almost coincides with the solar angle at noon on the summer solstice.’ These observations were made 2 days before the summer solstice. The results of our analysis when applied to the same latitude after 90 days of simulation leading up to the summer solstice compare well with these observations. We find a very slight overhang on the north side, and the slope of the southern face is 57°.
Sensitivity
The initial surface contour used as the starting point of our computation experiments has a horizontal wavelength that is the same as the peak-to-trough amplitude. This ensures that any growth in amplitude brings the surface into a regime where the peaks are taller than the distance separating them, an observation often made regarding penitent features (Reference Lliboutry, Williams and FerrignoLliboutry, 1999; Reference Corripio, Purves, De Jong, Collins and RanziCorripio and Purves, 2005). Experiments with a higher aspect ratio (width:height) expand both the latitudinal range and the domain orientation where our analysis shows amplitude growth (for further details, see Reference CathlesCathles, 2011, Fig. 6.9). This does not contradict observations, as suncup features (Reference Rhodes, Armstrong and WarrenRhodes and others, 1987; Reference BettertonBetterton, 2001; Reference Mitchell and TiedjeMitchell and Tiedje, 2010) are found at higher latitudes and do not exhibit directionality. Suncups are short, 3-D perturbations to the surface where the width of the feature is greater than the depth of the perturbation. Since suncups are not 2-D features, our model is not well suited to further explore their formation.
It has also been suggested that penitents cannot form in snowfields with high surface albedos (Reference Kotlyakov and LebedevaKotlyakov and Lebedeva, 1974). We did not investigate the initial formation of surface roughness; however, once initial roughness is present, we do not find that higher albedo reduces the propensity to form penitents. When the surface albedo is increased from 0.6 to 0.8 the overall ablation decreases, but we find that the normalized growth rate of penitents actually increases. In general, our results are robust to changes in the physical properties of snow. For example, the trends shown in Figures 3 and 4 do not change for surface albedo different from our standard value of 0.6.
Geographic exceptions
Penitents have been reported at high latitudes (Reference Wright and PriestleyWright and Priestley, 1922; Reference OdellOdell, 1941; Reference Favier, Agosta, Genthon, Arnaud, Trouvillez and GalléeFavier and others, 2011). The most detailed report of high-latitude penitents comes from observations on Koettlitz Glacier, Antarctica, where they formed on a steep (30˚) north-facing slope (Reference Wright and PriestleyWright and Priestley, 1922). Figure 7 compares a sketch of penitents (although Wright and Priestley (1922) refer to these features as ‘ploughshares’) observed during the British Antarctic expedition of 1910–13 on the north-facing slope of Koettlitz Glacier at 78˚ S. Our analysis is able to recreate these features because the steep surface slope acts to modify the bimodal insolation distribution characteristics of high latitudes.
There are many unique situations that could limit the daily incident solar energy to a narrow range of zenith angles outside the range needed for penitent growth. The simulations for Koettlitz Glacier provide one such example. Persistent clouds at a particular time each day or shadowing from mountains could also produce penitent growth at high latitudes. The bulk of incident energy at the high latitudes arrives from low-elevation angles, so even distant mountains or slight slopes could affect the distribution of incident insolation. The results here do not prohibit the formation of penitents at high latitudes but they do suggest that special circumstances in surface geometry, shadowing and cloudiness are needed at high latitudes to produce penitents. This may explain why penitent fields are relatively rare in Antarctica and Greenland.
Surface-roughness albedo
Perhaps the most significant result of the analysis presented here is that surface roughness reduces the effective albedo of a snow surface. This means that the energy balance of a snow surface is influenced not only by the microscopic properties of the material forming the surface (e.g. the properties of snow), but also by the macroscopic properties of the surface, i.e. how rough it is and whether there is geometry that traps radiation. Figure 9 shows the average daily effective albedo (the ratio of energy reflected back to the atmosphere by the rough surface to the total energy incident on the rough surface; see Cathles and others (2011) for further discussion of effective albedo) for surfaces covered with penitents with three different snow albedos. The effective albedo was calculated over one periodic unit (peak to peak), ensuring that all insolation entering the unit was either absorbed within the region or reflected back to the atmosphere. In each case, the effective albedo is significantly less than the albedo of the surface material. For a snow albedo of 0.6, the effective albedo of a penitent field is reduced to 0.33 simply by the effect of radiation trapping within the roughness. The increase of absorbed energy relative to a flat surface is a factor of 1.67. Our analysis of how surface albedo is influenced by roughness is consistent with published observations (Reference Lliboutry, Williams and FerrignoLliboutry, 1999; Reference Corripio, Purves, De Jong, Collins and RanziCorripio and Purves, 2005) and with Monte Carlo modeling of sunlight-trapping by sastrugi (Reference Warren, Brandt and HintonWarren and others, 1998, Fig. 13). However, one previous study of the energy balance of penitent-covered surfaces suggested that there was a reduction in absorbed shortwave radiation (Reference Corripio, Purves, De Jong, Collins and RanziCorripio and Purves, 2005). We think that result is in error, and suggest that both the proper treatment of the geometric focusing effect of surface roughness with the integral-equation-based method used here and careful consideration of the effective albedo are necessary for an accurate account of penitent energy balance. We therefore suggest that penitent formation can accelerate mountain-glacier loss and speed seasonal snowpack runoff. This is an important factor to consider when planning water management (Reference Corripio, Purves, De Jong, Collins and RanziCorripio and Purves, 2005; Reference VuilleVuille and others, 2008). Additionally, penitent formation may have been important in past climates in which large ice sheets existed equatorward of 55˚. For example, penitent formation may have affected the southern margins of the Laurentide ice sheet, which reached latitudes lower than 42˚ N. Radiative trapping by surface roughness could also have reduced the tropical albedo during Neoproterozoic global glaciations, which is crucial for the termination of these events (Reference Abbot and PierrehumbertAbbot and Pierrehumbert, 2010). A recent study suggests penitents may not be restricted to Earth and may play a role in the energy balance of icy planets (Reference Hobley, Moore and HowardHobley and others, 2013). The latitudinal range of penitents would depend on the planet’s orbital parameters.
Conclusions
Penitents have remained mysterious snow-surface features since they were documented by Charles Darwin. We have shown using radiative transfer analysis featuring surface-to-surface shortwave energy exchange, and driven only by sunlight, that the observed orientational and latitudinal limits on penitent formation result directly from the detailed evolution of the sun through the sky. The critical factor determining whether penitents can form is the degree to which daily incoming energy is focused within a narrow range of incident angles. For horizontal surfaces, this criterion is only met at low latitudes for east–west-oriented ridges. While the radiative transfer analysis presented here was not designed to encompass all the physical processes involved in the formation of penitents, it captures the essential irreducible mechanism for penitent formation. More general models of snow and ice surfaces do not permit the spontaneous formation of penitent fields because they lack the integral-equation formulation of surface-to-surface radiative transfer essential to the growth of penitents. We further find that the penitent-like surfaces created by the analysis shown here have significantly lower effective albedos than a smooth horizontal surface. Thus the presence of penitent fields may increase the rate of snowmelt.
Acknowledgements
This research was supported by US National Science Foundation (NSF) grant ARC-0907834. We thank Stephen Warren and Javier Corripio for comprehensive and constructive comments on early drafts of this paper, and two reviewers and the Scientific Editor Tomas Mölg for substantially improving the manuscript. We also thank Gerhard Hüdeppohl and Douglas Melzer for the use of their photographs.