Frost flowers
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

A frost flower or ice flower is formed when thin layers of ice are extruded from long-stemmed plants in autumn or early winter. The thin layers of ice are often formed into exquisite patterns that curl into " petals" that resemble flowers.


Types

Frost flower formations are also referred to as ''frost faces'', ''ice castles'', ''ice blossoms'', or ''crystallofolia''. Types of frost flowers include needle ice, frost pillars or frost columns, extruded from pores in the soil, and ice ribbons, rabbit frost or rabbit ice, extruded from linear fissures in plant stems. The term "ice flower" is also used as synonym for ice ribbons, but it may be used to describe the unrelated phenomenon of window frost as well.


Formation

The formation of frost flowers is dependent on a freezing weather condition occurring when the ground is not already frozen. The sap in the stem of the plants will expand (water expands when frozen), causing long, thin cracks to form along the length of the stem. Water is then drawn through these cracks via capillary action and freezes upon contact with the air. As more water is drawn through the cracks it pushes the thin ice layers further from the stem, causing a thin "petal" to form. The petals of frost flowers are very delicate and will break when touched. They usually melt or sublimate when exposed to sunlight and are usually visible in the early morning or in shaded areas. Examples of plants that often form frost flowers are white crownbeard (''
Verbesina virginica ''Verbesina virginica'', known by the common names white crownbeard, or frostweed is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae. It is native to the Southeastern United States, where it is found in calcareous soil, often in bottomland ...
''), commonly called frostweed, yellow ironweed ('' Verbesina alternifolia''), dittany ('' Cunila origanoides''), and '' Helianthemum canadense''. File:BurstBark.jpg, Example of the hydraulic power of capilliary freezing File:Frost-Flower-4.JPG, Frost flower closeup File:Frost flower Oct 2017.jpg, Frost flower on a yellow ironweed stem in southern Missouri File:Frost flower on dittany.jpg, Frost flower on common dittany (Cunila origanoides) in NW Arkansas


See also

* Hair ice * Needle ice * Frostweed


References

* * * *


External links


Website about frost flowers
{{ice Frost and rime Hydrology Water ice Plant physiology