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Rich_Sheffield

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Rich_Sheffield said:

Do any of you " climbers " know the difference

 

Yah, I know the difference. There is no difference. There. Sea ice and pack ice are the same thing. The salt water around Antarctica almost doubles in size in the winter, forming pack ice. Pack ice is basically solid, but there are leads (cracks) everywhere, and so the ice shifts. Pack ice, and shelf ice are different, take for example the Ross Ice shelf. It never thaws, and the bottom can rest on the rock bottom.

Good question Rich. Anything else I can help you with? rolleyes.gif

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crazyjz said:

Sea ice refers to frozen seawater, such as one would find at the North Pole proper. Pack ice is a misnomer, but in this instance would probably refer to a ice body formed in large part by glacial flow (calving). The majority on Antarctic ice in of fresh water derivation.

 

Uh, no. Sea ice is frozen sea water. Floes are seperate patches of sea ice. Pack ice just refers to a bunch of floes all stuck together in a large frozen mass.

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