Type of deformed ice formed by one piece of ice overriding another. When young ice under pressure is forced alternately over and under like thrusting fingers, the ice is termed finger rafted ice.
Pressure process by which one floe overrides another; most commonly found in new and young ice. A type of rafting common in nilas whereby interlocking thrusts are formed - each floe thrusting "fingers
" alternately over and under the other - is known as finger rafting.
Pressure process whereby one piece of ice overrides another. Most common in new and young ice (cf. Finger rafting). Finger rafting is a type of rafting whereby interlocking thrusts are formed, each fl
oe thrusting 'fingers' alternately over and under each other. Common in nilas and grey ice. Rafting plays an important role in increasing ice thickness within the Antarctic pack. It is the dominant dynamic mechanism whereby floes reach between about 0.4 and 0.6m thick in the early stages of ice development. Beyond this thickness, converging floes are more likely to form ridges than to raft.