EPOD 20th - Hair Ice
September 25, 2020
We’re celebrating 20 years of Earth Science Picture of the Day during the month of September! Today’s photo features a popular EPOD from the past. Thanks to all of our followers (on the blog, Facebook, Instagram and Twitter) for supporting us. Thanks also to all of you who’ve submitted your photos. We’re most appreciative. This EPOD was originally published February 22, 2010.
Photographer: Helga Schöps
Summary Authors: Helga Schöps; Jim Foster
The photo above showing a particularly beautiful example of hair ice was found in the Black Forest of southern Germany, near the town of Schwarzwald. Similar to needle ice, hair ice (in German it’s called Haareis) is a type of frost flower usually formed in dead or rotting wood and leaves during episodes of high humidity and low temperatures. According to Dr. Gerhard Wagner in Switzerland, hair ice is related to the presence of a fungus. For this type of frost to occur, water or fluid within the stems of certain plants is exuded to the surface by capillary action whereupon it immediately freezes. In some instances, the fluid, which isn’t sap, oozes to the air/bark surface via a fracture in the woody material. Under just the right circumstances, amazingly delicate needles of ice are created. Photo taken on February 16, 2007.
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