Jökull

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Jökull - 01.12.1969, Qupperneq 71

Jökull - 01.12.1969, Qupperneq 71
season, if any, that summer. This is exactly what happened last year (1968). American meteorologists are using infrared sensing thermometers and measuring the sur- face heat radiation of the water of Hudson Bay. As a result they were generally able to rein- force previous indications that the melt water from the thawing pack-ice remains a clistinct body significantly colder than the surrounding waters almost until the autumn freeze up. This indicates that once the icepack has reached the coastal waters of northern Iceland the chances that the following winter will bring ice into these same waters are better than even, since the cold ancl less saline surface waters will freeze more easily than in average years (see Fig. 3 and Fig. 8). To stop this trend a radica! change in the atmospheric circulation is necess- ary. The ice-pack has pressure ridges reaching a height of about 8 meters, while corresponding pendants go to three to five times the height of the ridges, below the normal bottom of the ice-pack. These ridges and pendants tend to increase the effects of the wind and the cur- rents respectively. It is evident that a great force is needed to move an icemass of about 10,000 km3 several hundreds of kilometers. A single low, even an intense one, only breaks up the ice edge, but does not move the ice-pack much. To move such a rnass a longterm circulation in a pre- vailing direction is needed. Once the ice-pack has started to move and gathered momentum it will neither be easily stopped nor diverted from its course. The author has analysed over 30 maps depicting the average monthly surface pressure, selected from November 1964 to Janu- ary 1969, and the correlation between the pre- vailing wind direction and the extent and the position of the ice edge is quite striking. There are several difficulties in mapping the ice edge by the use of APT pictures. It is very difficult to distinguish between ice and clouds from a single picture; cloucls move however 20 to 2000 times faster than the ice-pack, and with several pictures in chronological order it becomes easy. The land in high latitude is only clearly visible when it is covered with snow, otherwise it is almost impossible to be sure whether a dark area is sea or land. Melting Fig. 8. August 11, 1968. The unusually cold surface waters surrounding Iceland have cool- ed the air to its condensation temperature; the resulting fog over the coastal waters shows off the dark land area quite distinctly. The glaciers of Icelancl are easily seen. The ice tongue has withdrawn to the north and is seen extending through the gap between Spitsbergen and Greenland reaching well south of Shannon Island. Fig. 9. August 18, 1968. In the evening sun- light the extent of the ice-pack along the east coast of Greenland is easily observed. JÖKULL 19. AR 67
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