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Four-Fold Check on Mean Annual Temperature, McMurdo Sound, Antarctica

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2017

Robert L. Nichols
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
Donald G. Ball
Affiliation:
Metcalf and Eddy, Engineers, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
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Abstract

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1964

A 15.2-m. hole was drilled in bedrock with a pneumatic drill at Marble Point, McMurdo Sound in the early part of February 1958. The temperatures at various depths in the hole were as follows (Fig. 1):

Fig. 1. Curve showing the distribution of temperature in the drill hole at Marble Point, McMurdo Sound, Antarctica

The inversion of temperature between 12.2 and 15.2 m. was due to brine which entered the drill hole at 3.7 m. and ran to the bottom (Reference Ball and NicholsBall and Nichols, 1960, p. 1705). The rock temperature below the zone of seasonal temperature change is in general within a few degrees of the mean annual temperature of the air just above the surface of the ground (Reference Van Orstrand and GutenbergVan Orstrand, 1951, p. 108–09, 113). The mean annual air temperature at Marble Point must, therefore, be close to −20.0° C.

The Wilson Piedmont Glacier is located on the west side of McMurdo Sound between New Harbour and Granite Harbour. Approximately 5 km. inland from its terminus near Marble Point, at an altitude of about 300 m., six test pits were dug and holes were drilled downward from the bottom of the pits by core barreling. The following temperatures were obtained from the pits and holes (Fig. 2):

Fig. 2. Thermal gradient near the surface of the Wilson Piedmont Glacier, McMurdo Sound, Antarctica. Pit No. 4, elevation 300 m., 28 December 1957

The −22.0° C. at the bottom of pits Nos. 3 and 4 is not far from the mean annual air temperature in this area and when corrected for altitude gives a sea-level temperature of approximately −20.0° C.

The thickness of the sea ice in McMurdo Sound close to Marble Point was determined during the 1958–59 field season. The average of 318 thickness measurements was 243 cm. for the period 17 November to 10 December 1958. They ranged from 162.6 cm. to 271.8 cm. The thickest ice was along the shore where it reached the bottom. Late in the summer just before the ice started to move out, the thickness was about the same, but the ice was very soft and weak. The mean annual temperature necessary to form this ice can be roughly calculated. Assuming that the freezing point of the water was −2.0° C., the thermal conductivity of the ice was 0.005 cal. cm.−1sec.−1 °C.−1, the specific heat of the ice was 0.5 cal. g.−1 °C.−1, the water was everywhere at the freezing point, and the ice was formed in 12 months, then calculation shows (personal communication from Francis Birch) that the mean annual temperature is approximately −17.0° C. This calculation does not take into account the deterioration of the ice which takes place during the summer months. When this is considered, calculation shows that the mean annual temperature is a few degrees above −17.0° C.

The mean annual air temperature at Hut Point, Cape Royds and Cape Evans, McMurdo Sound, for the 5 year interval 1902, 1903, 1908–09, 1911 and 1912 was −17.4° C. (Reference SimpsonSimpson 1919, p. 81). The mean annual temperature at the Williams Air Operations Facility (Hut Point), McMurdo Sound, for the 7 year interval 1957–63 was −17.7° C. (personal communication from William S. Weyant).

The mean annual sea-level air temperature in the McMurdo Sound area as determined from bedrock, ice pit and air temperatures, and from sea-ice thickness is, therefore, close to −20.0° C.

Acknowledgements

The data were provided by the Commanding Officer, U.S. Naval Construction Battalion Reconnaissance Unit. The writers are happy to acknowledge the help they received from Commander Henry C. Stephens, U.S.N., and from Mr. J. J. Scheuren, Jr., of Metcalf and Eddy, Engineers, Boston, Massachusetts.

References

Ball, D. G. Nichols, R. L. 1960. Saline lakes and drill-hole brines, McMurdo Sound, Antarctica. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, Vol. 71, No. 11, p. 170307.Google Scholar
Simpson, G. C. 1919. British Antarctic Expedition 1910–1913. Meteorology. Vol. 1. Calcutta, Thacker, Spink and Co.Google Scholar
Van Orstrand, C. E. 1951. Observed temperatures in the Earth’s crust. (In Gutenberg, B., ed. Internal constitution of the Earth. Second edition. New York, Dover Publications, Inc., p. 10749. (Physics of the Earth. Vol. 7.))Google Scholar
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Fig. 1. Curve showing the distribution of temperature in the drill hole at Marble Point, McMurdo Sound, Antarctica

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Thermal gradient near the surface of the Wilson Piedmont Glacier, McMurdo Sound, Antarctica. Pit No. 4, elevation 300 m., 28 December 1957