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Maine's Allagash River Serves Up Pancake Ice (Photo)

Pancake Ice
“Pancake ice” on the Allagash River in Maine. (Image credit: USGS/Twitter @USGS)

Would you like some syrup with your pancake ice? This U.S. Geological Survey image taken on the Allagash River in Maine shows "pancake ice," thin slabs that form in polar seas when slush or grease ice (a thin, slick layer of ice) accumulates into floating ice pads.

Temperatures right around 0 degrees Celsius (32 degrees Fahrenheit) with moderate wave activity are ideal for creating this phenomenon. The "pancakes" can be up to 10 feet (3 meters) across, and up to 4 inches (10 centimeters) thick but typically don't disturb navigation. The raised rims are caused sometimes by the pieces striking each other and sometimes by slush that gets splashed onto the edges and freezes to gradually form a rim. This type of ice can also form at depth and then float to the surface.

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Nina Sen
Nina Sen is a frequent contributor to Live Science’s Life’s Little Mysteries series: an exploration and explanation of our world’s phenomena, both natural and man-made. She also writes astronomy photo stories for Live Science's sister site Space.com.