Please wait while we load your article...

Home > Firn

Learn more about "Firn"

 


Firn


Firn is partially-compacted névé, a type of snow that has been left over from past seasons and has been Recrystallization|recrystallized into a substance denser than névé. It is ice that is at an intermediate stage between snow and glacial ice. Firn has the appearance of wet sugar, but has a hardness that makes it extremely resistant to shovelling. It generally has a density greater than 550 kg/m³ and is often found underneath the snow that accumulates at the head of a glacier. Snowflakes are compressed under the weight of the overlying snowpack. Individual crystals near the melting point are semiliquid and slick, allowing them to glide along other crystal planes and to fill in the spaces between them, increasing the ice's density. Where the crystals touch they bond together, squeezing the air between them to the surface or into bubbles. In the summer months, the crystal metamorphosis can occur more rapidly because of water percolation between the crystals. By summer's end the result is firn. The minimum altitude that firn accumulates on a glacier is called the ''firn limit'', ''firn line'' or ''snowline''.

References


- USGS Glossary of Selected Glacier and Related Terminology
- Fundamentals of Physical Geography Category:Glaciology Category:Water ice Category:German loanwords

Related Images

- Sampling the surface of a glacier. There is increasingly denser firn between surface snow and blue glacier ice.
- Firn from South Cascade Glacier, 80x magnified.

Sources: StartLearningNow, Wikipedia | Usage license: GNU FDL

“ Welcome to Start Learning Now. Explore to your heart's content, and we hope you enjoy reading the material we have assembled for you here! ”

 


Related News


Further Resources




Related Resources



search


©2003-2007 All Rights Reserved, Start Learning Now e-Learning Portal. Wiki-CMS by Ivan Wong.Clicky Web Analytics