Cryosphere glossary

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P R S T U V W Y Z

climatology

the scientific study of climate; the aspect of meteorology which studies processes of climate formation, distribution of climates over the globe, analysis of the causes of differences of climate (physical climatology), and the application of climatic data to the solution of specific design or operational problems (applied climatology); climatology may be further subdivided according to purpose or point of view: agricultural climatology, air-mass climatology, aviation climatology, bioclimatology, dynamic climatology, medical climatology, macroclimatology, mesoclimatology, microclimatology, paleoclimatology, synoptic climatology, etc..

close cavity ice

ice formed in a closed space, cavity or cave in permafrost.

close pack ice

composed of close ice that is mostly in contact; ice cover 7/10ths to 9/10ths.

closed talik

a layer or body of unfrozen ground occupying a depression in the permafrost table below a lake or river.

closed-system freezing

freezing that occurs under conditions that preclude the gain or loss of any water by the system.

closed-system pingo

a pingo formed by doming of frozen ground due to freezing of injected water supplied by expulsion of pore water during permafrost aggradation in the closed talik under a former water body.

cloud

a hydrometeor consisting of a visible aggregate of minute particles of liquid water or ice, or both, suspended in the free air and usually not touching the earth's surface; it may also include larger particles of liquid water or ice (precipitation particles) and non-aqueous liquid or solid particles such as those present in fumes, smoke and dust (aerosols); cloudiness is the same as cloud cover; but usually it is used in a very general sense.

cloud amount

that portion of the sky cover which is attributed to clouds; the unit of measurement is the okta or tenths (meaning one-eighth or one-tenth) of the sky dome as seen by the observer.

coefficient of compressibility

decrease in volume per unit volume of a substance resulting from a unit increase in pressure, under isothermic conditions.

cold front

any non-occluded front that moves in such a way so that colder air replaces warmer air; the leading edge of a relatively cold air mass.

cold glacier

glacier in which most of the ice is below the pressure melting point; nonetheless, the glacier's surface may be susceptible to melt due to incoming solar radiation, and the ice at the rock/ice interface may be warmed as a result of the natural (geothermal) heat from the earth's surface.

cold low

at a given level in the atmosphere, any low that is generally characterized by colder air near its center than around its periphery; the opposite of a warm low.

cold pole

the location that has the lowest annual mean temperature in its hemisphere.

collapse scar

that portion of a peatland where the whole or part of a palsa or peat plateau has thawed and collapsed to the level of the surrounding peatland.

composite wedge

a wedge showing evidence of both primary and secondary filling.

compression flow

flow that occurs when glacier motion is decelerating down-slope.

condensation

the physical process by which a vapor becomes a liquid or solid; the opposite of evaporation; in meteorological usage, this term is applied only to transformation from vapor to liquid; any process in which a solid forms directly from its vapor is termed sublimation, as is the reverse process.

conduction

the transport of energy entirely resulting from the random motions of individual molecules, and not from any concerted group movement; occurs in response to temperature gradients; contrasts with convection, in which energy is transported by molecules moving together in coherent groups.

congelation ice

an advanced form of new ice that forms as a stable sheet with a smooth bottom surface.
Image
congelation_ice.jpg

A photograph in natural light of the vertically oriented pores in congelation ice.

Ted Maksym, United States Naval Academy

conglomeric cryogenic fabric

a distinct soil micromorphology, resulting from the effects of freezing and thawing processes, in which coarser soil particles form compound arrangements.