ice field
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A large, continuous, flat-topped expanse of floating sea ice, covering a significant area of the ocean's surface. It is distinct from smaller, individual pieces of floating ice (ice floes) due to its greater size and more consolidated, sheet-like nature.
Usage
The term "ice field" is used specifically in geographical, oceanographic, and navigational contexts to describe a major, persistent feature of polar and subpolar seas. It refers to the ice itself as a geographical entity.
Examples
- The research vessel altered its course to navigate around the vast ice field.
- Satellite imagery showed a massive ice field drifting slowly from the Arctic basin.
- Early explorers were often trapped for months by impassable ice fields.
Advanced Usage
- "To encounter an ice field": To come upon a large area of sea ice during travel or exploration.
- The ship's log recorded that they began to encounter an ice field near the 70th parallel.
Variants and Related Words
- Ice floe (n): A single, relatively flat piece of sea ice, smaller than an ice field. An ice field is composed of many consolidated ice floes.
- Pack ice (n): A broader term for sea ice that covers vast areas of the ocean. An ice field is a type of pack ice that is particularly extensive and flat.
- Ice shelf (n): A thick, permanent platform of ice that is attached to a coastline, not freely floating like an ice field.
Synonyms
- Ice sheet (when referring specifically to a floating, sea-based expanse; note: "ice sheet" more commonly refers to a land-based glacial mass).
- Sea-ice expanse.
Antonyms
- Open water.
- Polynya (an area of open water surrounded by sea ice).
Noun
- a large flat mass of ice (larger than an ice floe) floating at sea