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How ice forms
Ok, I'm bored but I was also curious...What effect does no snow have on the ice. I was always under the believe that snow covered ice is more insulated so it doesn't get as thick as no snow. But I read somewhere here that clear ice allows the sunlight through and heats up the water under the ice thus melting it.
I need to know because it has an effect on my Ice Out guess :laugh: |
Both may be true: http://climate.umn.edu/doc/ice_out/i...escription.htm
However, it may or may not snow soon. There may or may not be a lot of sun in the next six weeks. As Yogi said "Prediction is very hard, especially about the future". |
Yogi is the best..
Makes me laugh every time :laugh::laugh:
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Ice is much sturdier at 10-degree temp than at 30-degree temp. It obviously will crystalize into ice at 32-degrees but seems to have much greater strength, hardness, & elasticity as it cools down from 30 to 10-degrees. It's definately much tougher to chop at ten degrees, requiring a 2-lb mason's hammer to pound on an ice-chopper to break up lake ice around the dock.
Maybe for the same reason, making ski area snow with compressed air and water works a lot better at ten degrees than at 30. |
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