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Using electron backscatter diffraction to measure full crystallographic orientation in Antarctic land-fast sea ice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2018

PAT WONGPAN*
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, University of Otago, 730 Cumberland Street, Dunedin 9016, New Zealand
DAVID J. PRIOR
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of Otago, 360 Leith Street, Dunedin 9016, New Zealand
PATRICIA J. LANGHORNE
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, University of Otago, 730 Cumberland Street, Dunedin 9016, New Zealand
KATHERINE LILLY
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of Otago, 360 Leith Street, Dunedin 9016, New Zealand
INGA J. SMITH
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, University of Otago, 730 Cumberland Street, Dunedin 9016, New Zealand
*
Correspondence: Pat Wongpan <pat.wongpan@postgrad.otago.ac.nz>
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Abstract

We have mapped the full crystallographic orientation of sea ice using electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD). This is the first time EBSD has been used to study sea ice. Platelet ice is a feature of sea ice near ice shelves. Ice crystals accumulate as an unconsolidated sub-ice platelet layer beneath the columnar ice (CI), where they are subsumed by the advancing sea–ice interface to form incorporated platelet ice (PI). As is well known, in CI the crystal preferred orientation comprises dominantly horizontal c-axes, while PI has c-axes varying between horizontal and vertical. For the first time, this study shows the a-axes of CI and PI are not random. Misorientation analysis has been used to illuminate the possible drivers of these alignments. In CI the misorientation angle distribution from random pairs and neighbour pairs of grains are indistinguishable, indicating the distributions are a consequence of crystal preferred orientation. Geometric selection during growth will develop the a-axis alignment in CI if ice growth in water is fastest parallel to the a-axis, as has previously been hypothesised. In contrast, in PI random-pair and neighbour-pair misorientation distributions are significantly different, suggesting mechanical rotation of crystals at grain boundaries as the most likely explanation.

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Papers
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2018
Figure 0

Fig. 1. (a) Three columnar ice grains with lamellar internal structure related to the growth of the ice/water interface. Magenta lines are traces of the basal plane. (b) Schematic of sea-ice formation with distance from an ice shelf, showing columnar ice, incorporated platelet ice and a sub-ice platelet layer. (c) Sub-ice platelet layer dynamics in which frazil arrives under the ice cover (c.1), the platelet crystal rotates (c.2) and again (c.3) to achieve mechanical stability. Stereonets (described in Fig. 5) are also shown in c.2 and c.3 to represent the process. Arrows (on platelet crystals) and dots (on stereonets) represent c-axes.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. (a) Location of the study site in eastern McMurdo Sound in 2011 where the ice core was taken. The satellite image was taken on 29 November 2011 by MODIS Terra (https://lance-modis.eosdis.nasa.gov) and overlaid on Quantarctica v2.0, a free GIS package for Antarctica (http://quantarctica.npolar.no/). (b) Core sketch based on Hughes and others (2014) and thin sections of samples of interest.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. (a) The ice core was cut in half. (b) The top view shows the half cylinder was cut into four surfaces. (c) The side view of the cut and four surfaces.

Figure 3

Fig. 4. Some issues for EBSD on sea ice. (a) Secondary electron image montage of CI-h from the SEM shows salt (bright flecks on grain boundaries: S) which was expelled along grain boundaries and exposed brine pockets (grey holes: BP). (b) Image to show level of indexing in raw EBSD data. Coloured pixels have a good quality EBSD solution. Non-indexed pixels are transparent so that the underlying greyscale image (as in Fig. 4a) is visible.

Figure 4

Fig. 5. (a) A three-dimensional representation shows the c-axis (red stem), the basal plane (gray plane) and three a-axes (three blue stems) and has the colatitude γ measured from z to the c-axis. Three separate stereonets show the projection of the respective unit vectors onto the XY plane (b) c-axis (red dot), (c) a-axes (three blue closed dots) and (d) m-planes (three blue open dots).

Figure 5

Fig. 6. EBSD maps from columnar ice samples (a) and incorporated platelet ice samples (d) and corresponding CPOs presented as stereonets (b and c). The CPOs are all plotted in the same reference frame as shown in Fig. 5 (z in the centre of the net). (a and d) EBSD map with 1 µm step size coloured according to the inverse pole figure shown on top and overlaid by grain construction from MTEX based on 5° misorientation angle threshold. Note that the grey triangles mark the common corner of the three sections. Solid and dashed lines denote the shared edges. (b and c) Orientations for each grain (black dots) are overlaid by contours calculated from the dataset orientation distribution function. Contours are multiples of uniform distribution (m.u.d.). Stereonets are plotted on equal area, lower-hemisphere projections (see Fig. 5). All pixels in (a and d) are used for contours, so that contours are weighted by grain area in the maps. Red dashed lines, circles, squares and triangles are visual aids for weak alignments of a-axes and m-planes in incorporated platelet ice interpreted in the text.

Figure 6

Fig. 7. First column from top to bottom row: EBSD map of all grains of CI-h and PI-h coloured based on their colatitudes and the corresponding stereonets for each plane. Second, third and fourth columns show subsets for sub-horizontal (sh), inclined (in) and sub-vertical grains (sv). Note that one c-axis orientation has three corresponding a-axes and m-planes (Fig. 5).

Figure 7

Table 1. Grain properties

Figure 8

Fig. 8. (a) Neighbour-pair and random-pair misorientation angle distributions of columnar ice (CI-h, CI-v2 and CI-v3 grouped together) and (b) incorporated platelet ice (PI-h, PI-v2 and PI-v1 grouped together). Solid and dashed lines are theoretical distributions of misorientation angles for no CPO for crystals with hexagonal and cylindrical symmetry, respectively (Morawiec, 1995). (c) and (d) are empirical cumulative distribution functions (ECDF) of misorientation angle. Note that p represents the p-value from a two-sample Kolmogorov–Smirnov test.

Figure 9

Fig. 9. Colatitude distributions of columnar ice (a) samples (CI-h, CI-v2 and CI-v3e grouped together) and incorporated platelet ice (b) samples (PI-h, PI-v2 and PI-v1 grouped together), respectively. Dashed lines are theoretical distribution of colatitudes for no CPO for crystals with cylindrical symmetry (Morawiec, 1995; Treverrow and others, 2010). Neighbour-pair and random-pair colatitude-difference distributions for columnar (c) and incorporated platelet ice (d).

Figure 10

Fig. 10. (a) Schematic illustration of important processes in controlling grain orientations in the formation of incorporated platelet ice. (b) and (c) are misorientation angle distributions from Figs. 8a, b. In (d) and (e) CI and PI grains are tentatively identified according to the colatitude in Fig. 7.