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IX.—On the ice found under the surface of the water in rivers, called ground ice

 

作者: Richard Adie,  

 

期刊: Quarterly Journal of the Chemical Society of London  (RSC Available online 1862)
卷期: Volume 14, issue 1  

页码: 111-114

 

ISSN:1743-6893

 

年代: 1862

 

DOI:10.1039/QJ8621400111

 

出版商: RSC

 

数据来源: RSC

 

摘要:

111 IX.-On the Ice foutzd uizder the surface of the t;f/aterin Rivers called Ground Ice. By RICHARD ADIE. Liverpool. THEice found in the bed of a river or running stream under the surface of the water is a subject which has engaged the attention of men of science to endeavour to account for its occur- rence in an apparently unnatural position while it has also forced itself on the attention of practical men on account of the mischief vhich an accidental obstruction such as a branch of a tree lodged in the bed of a mill-course has been foGncl to occasion when the mter is charged with ice particles. I believe that I was among the first to state that ground-ice is formed in the coldest part of a stream and that the small crystals immediately after they are formed are carried along by the current submerged and entangled by plants or other obstriictions in the bed of the stream suitable for their detention.In the recent frost of December and January 1860-62 I searched for ground-ice where in past years I had found it. Yet though this frost was the most severe that has visited us during the sixty years of the century I found ground-ice only in one locality,-a shaded place where I was induced to search for it from seeing bundles of ice-crystals floating down the stream; for I had beford observed that where ground-ice exists some of it is constantly breaking off from the moorings. In this imtance the ice sur- rounded a stone covered over by the water of a rivulet which leaves the Marquis of Abercorn’s grounds at Duddingston near Edin- burgh.The other streams which I examined in the neighbourhood of Edinburgh shewed no floating crystals or other indications of the presence of ground-ice; they appeared to be well supplied with water which coming from underneath a covering of snow was unfavourable for showing this kind of ice. In the frosts of 1854 and of 1855 I found ground-ice in a number of rivers. These frosts differed from the recent om by penetrating into the ground to a greater extent. In 1854 the 112 ADIE ON GROUND ICE. frost entcred into the ground to the depth of 113 il?ches and thnt of 1855 to 13; inches. In 181iT)-l tlie earth had merely a crust of frozen soil under the snow,* 'l'he general calmness of the weather must lilrewisc have had influcncc; for in an espsed district in the neighbourliood of Liverpool I have repeatedly found quantities of ground-ice after two days' moderate frost accompanied by a dry brisk wind.Those who have examined ground-ice appear to think that the ?water has frozen in the bed of the river the current preventing it from freezing in its natural place-the surface. The appearance of tlie masses formed do not favour this view for many shady positions in streams are noted for exhibiting collections of ice that could never have frozen there. To ascertain the nature of ice when formed under water on the sides of a containing vessel I produced it rapidly by a freezing mixture when the ice assumed a very hard form A small stream about twelve miles from Liverpool where it joins the river Alt is extremely favourable for showing the phe- nomena of ground-ice in an open exposed district.I first saw it there in December 1846; and as I have since often examined the ice iu the beds of streams I wish to mention that the circumstance which appears to me most favourable for its formation is wind accompanying the frost. On 13th December 1846 the ground- ice was plentiful; my note at the time states that the frost had not been severe but the air had been very dry with a brisk wind. Ground-ice is capricious both in its time and place of settlement. On 3rd January 1854 I saw it in very large quantities in the bed of the Eden a little above Carlisle. In February 1855 after a frost which had gone deeper down in the grounci than the one of the previous year I searched the same part of the Eden without seeing any; there were a sufficient number of loose ice crystals floating down the stream to rcnder it probable that ground-ice existed higher up.On the same day I had seen ground-ice in th'e Ribble above Preston but none in the Lune above Lancaster. After I had become satisfied that the position of ground-ice is * Since the above was written the writer has been informed by a friend residing fifteen miles west of Edinburgh where the snow was not so deep that the frost in that locality penetrated the ground to the depth of an inch; and in a very few places where the ground had been denuded of snow by the wind the earth was frozen to the depth of thirteen inches.ADIE ON GROUND ICE. one of lodgment merely I have been in the habit of searching for it where the streams pass under stone arches and places most unfavourable to freezing and in these localities I have several times found it. The masses I have referred to as seen in the Eden in 1854 must have been lodged there for thy contained throughout their substance a few water-worn pebbles and they were all inclined towards the current from whence they were receiving continual supplies. I could not get at the collections of ice to measure them as they were all under the surface in a deep- flowing part of the stream; but one rose so near the surface as to give a ripple to the current and appeared to be from 4 to 6 feet high.Note on Mr. Adie's Paper On Ground Ice." By E. FRANKLAND, F. R. S. THE formation of ground-ice has excited considerable interest amongst the observers of natural phenomena and various sugges- tions have been made to account for its production. One of the most ingenious of these assumes that in rapidly-flowing streams the eddies and currents cause such a constant intermingling of the upper and lower mater-strata as to render the whole mass of the stream of one uniform temperature. When such a stream becomes cooled down to the freezing-point the usual surface-layer of cold water below 39.5' F. cannot of course be formed. The rocks and other solid bodies in the bed of the stream continue however to radiate heat through the water into the atmosphere and thus become reduced in temperature below the freezing point ; the necessary consequence of such a state of things being the forma- tion and gradual accumulation of ice around such solid bodies.The latter part of this hypothesis appears to be untenable inas- much as water is absolutely intranscalent to rays of' obscure heat consequently the passage of such rays from the bed of the stream through a stratum of water is absolutely impossible. It appears to me that the formation of ground-ice which is well known to take place only in rapidly-flowing streams depends upon the fact that ice like other crystalline bodies deposits itself more readily upon rough surfaces,--freezes in fact at a somewhat higher tem- perature when in contact with such surfaces than within the masF 114 DR.T€IUDICEIU&1 ON THE of liquid itself. Hence when a rippling stream is cooled to the rreezing point ice-crystals attach themselves to the pebbles and other objects in the bed of the river these crystals forming equally inviting nuclei for the further deposition of larger quantities of' ... ground-ice. The tendency of ground-ice to form in shady places as mentioned by Mr. Adie is an interesting observation which may probably find an explanation in the circumstance that water and ice although perfectly unable to transmit obscure rays of heat are yet to a certain extent transcalent to luminous heat. Tyndall has shown that certain interior portions of a block of ice may be melted by lumi- nous hcat which has already passed through a considerable thick- ness of ice; and it is well known that if a mass of ice containing an embedded pebble be exposed to the solar rays the ice around the pebble soon becomes melted.Any exposure therefore of ground-ice and its supernatant water to solar radiation would have the effect of warming the non-icy nuclei; thus renielting during the day a portion at least of the ground-ice which had been formed during the previous night consequeiitly such an exposure must be regarded as presenting an obstacle to the formation of this kind of ice although it is well known to favour the pro- duction of the ordinary surface ice.

 

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