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hichris123
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The density of ice is 0.9167 g/cm3 at 0 °C (under atmospheric pressure).

I know of two factors that may influence this (are there more?)

  1. Pressure

The glaciology faq (Common Questions and Myths about Glaciers) at the Alaska Science Center of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) mentions for glacier depth:

A good guess is that the ice thickness is about one-half of the surface width of the glacier. Although few glaciers have been measured, the measured thicknesses range from a few tens of meters for small glaciers to about 1,500 meters for the largest glaciers in Alaska.

Does the density of ice change significantly with depth?

The Wikipedia article on ice mentions the density of ice increasing slightly with decreasing temperature, and the different phases of ice under pressure, but nothing on density.

  1. Inclusion of air

Googling for pressure ice density the (my) first search finds Density of glacier ice at the International Glaciological Society. This focuses on air in glaciers making the density lower, and concludes that at larger depths we reach that 0.92 limit:

enter image description here

What would be a good average to take?

The density of ice is 0.9167 g/cm3 at 0 °C (under atmospheric pressure).

I know of two factors that may influence this (are there more?)

  1. Pressure

The glaciology faq (Common Questions and Myths about Glaciers) at the Alaska Science Center of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) mentions for glacier depth:

A good guess is that the ice thickness is about one-half of the surface width of the glacier. Although few glaciers have been measured, the measured thicknesses range from a few tens of meters for small glaciers to about 1,500 meters for the largest glaciers in Alaska.

Does the density of ice change significantly with depth?

The Wikipedia article on ice mentions the density of ice increasing slightly with decreasing temperature, and the different phases of ice under pressure, but nothing on density.

  1. Inclusion of air

Googling for pressure ice density the (my) first search finds Density of glacier ice at the International Glaciological Society. This focuses on air in glaciers making the density lower, and concludes that at larger depths we reach that 0.92 limit:

enter image description here

What would be a good average to take?

The density of ice is 0.9167 g/cm3 at 0 °C (under atmospheric pressure).

I know of two factors that may influence this (are there more?)

  1. Pressure

The glaciology faq (Common Questions and Myths about Glaciers) at the Alaska Science Center of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) mentions for glacier depth:

A good guess is that the ice thickness is about one-half of the surface width of the glacier. Although few glaciers have been measured, the measured thicknesses range from a few tens of meters for small glaciers to about 1,500 meters for the largest glaciers in Alaska.

Does the density of ice change significantly with depth?

The Wikipedia article on ice mentions the density of ice increasing slightly with decreasing temperature, and the different phases of ice under pressure, but nothing on density.

  1. Inclusion of air

Googling for pressure ice density the (my) first search finds Density of glacier ice at the International Glaciological Society. This focuses on air in glaciers making the density lower, and concludes that at larger depths we reach that 0.92 limit:

enter image description here

What would be a good average to take?

Inserted graph from mentioned PDF
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Jan Doggen
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The density of ice is 0.9167 g/cm3 at 0 °C (under atmospheric pressure).

I know of two factors that may influence this (are there more?)

  1. Pressure

The glaciology faq (Common Questions and Myths about Glaciers) at the Alaska Science Center of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) mentions for glacier depth:

A good guess is that the ice thickness is about one-half of the surface width of the glacier. Although few glaciers have been measured, the measured thicknesses range from a few tens of meters for small glaciers to about 1,500 meters for the largest glaciers in Alaska.

Does the density of ice change significantly with depth?

The Wikipedia article on ice mentions the density of ice increasing slightly with decreasing temperature, and the different phases of ice under pressure, but nothing on density.

  1. Inclusion of air

Googling for pressure ice density the (my) first search finds Density of glacier ice at the International Glaciological Society. This focuses on air in glaciers making the density lower, and concludes that at larger depths we reach that 0.92 limit.:

enter image description here

What would be a good average to take?

The density of ice is 0.9167 g/cm3 at 0 °C (under atmospheric pressure).

I know of two factors that may influence this (are there more?)

  1. Pressure

The glaciology faq (Common Questions and Myths about Glaciers) at the Alaska Science Center of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) mentions for glacier depth:

A good guess is that the ice thickness is about one-half of the surface width of the glacier. Although few glaciers have been measured, the measured thicknesses range from a few tens of meters for small glaciers to about 1,500 meters for the largest glaciers in Alaska.

Does the density of ice change significantly with depth?

The Wikipedia article on ice mentions the density of ice increasing slightly with decreasing temperature, and the different phases of ice under pressure, but nothing on density.

  1. Inclusion of air

Googling for pressure ice density the (my) first search finds Density of glacier ice at the International Glaciological Society. This focuses on air in glaciers making the density lower, and concludes that at larger depths we reach that 0.92 limit.

What would be a good average to take?

The density of ice is 0.9167 g/cm3 at 0 °C (under atmospheric pressure).

I know of two factors that may influence this (are there more?)

  1. Pressure

The glaciology faq (Common Questions and Myths about Glaciers) at the Alaska Science Center of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) mentions for glacier depth:

A good guess is that the ice thickness is about one-half of the surface width of the glacier. Although few glaciers have been measured, the measured thicknesses range from a few tens of meters for small glaciers to about 1,500 meters for the largest glaciers in Alaska.

Does the density of ice change significantly with depth?

The Wikipedia article on ice mentions the density of ice increasing slightly with decreasing temperature, and the different phases of ice under pressure, but nothing on density.

  1. Inclusion of air

Googling for pressure ice density the (my) first search finds Density of glacier ice at the International Glaciological Society. This focuses on air in glaciers making the density lower, and concludes that at larger depths we reach that 0.92 limit:

enter image description here

What would be a good average to take?

added 11 characters in body
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user889
user889

The density of ice is 0.9167 g/cm3cm3 at 0 °C (under atmospheric pressure).

I know of two factors that may influence this (are there more?)

  1. Pressure

The glaciology faq (Common Questions and Myths about Glaciers) at the Alaska Science Center of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) mentions for glacier depth:

A good guess is that the ice thickness is about one-half of the surface width of the glacier. Although few glaciers have been measured, the measured thicknesses range from a few tens of meters for small glaciers to about 1,500 meters for the largest glaciers in Alaska.

Does the density of ice change significantly with depth?

The Wikipedia article on ice mentions the density of ice increasing slightly with decreasing temperature, and the different phases of ice under pressure, but nothing on density.

  1. Inclusion of air

Googling for pressure ice density the (my) first search finds Density of glacier ice at the International Glaciological Society. This focuses on air in glaciers making the density lower, and concludes that at larger depths we reach that 0.92 limit.

What would be a good average to take?

The density of ice is 0.9167 g/cm3 at 0 °C (under atmospheric pressure).

I know of two factors that may influence this (are there more?)

  1. Pressure

The glaciology faq (Common Questions and Myths about Glaciers) at the Alaska Science Center of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) mentions for glacier depth:

A good guess is that the ice thickness is about one-half of the surface width of the glacier. Although few glaciers have been measured, the measured thicknesses range from a few tens of meters for small glaciers to about 1,500 meters for the largest glaciers in Alaska.

Does the density of ice change significantly with depth?

The Wikipedia article on ice mentions the density of ice increasing slightly with decreasing temperature, and the different phases of ice under pressure, but nothing on density.

  1. Inclusion of air

Googling for pressure ice density the (my) first search finds Density of glacier ice at the International Glaciological Society. This focuses on air in glaciers making the density lower, and concludes that at larger depths we reach that 0.92 limit.

What would be a good average to take?

The density of ice is 0.9167 g/cm3 at 0 °C (under atmospheric pressure).

I know of two factors that may influence this (are there more?)

  1. Pressure

The glaciology faq (Common Questions and Myths about Glaciers) at the Alaska Science Center of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) mentions for glacier depth:

A good guess is that the ice thickness is about one-half of the surface width of the glacier. Although few glaciers have been measured, the measured thicknesses range from a few tens of meters for small glaciers to about 1,500 meters for the largest glaciers in Alaska.

Does the density of ice change significantly with depth?

The Wikipedia article on ice mentions the density of ice increasing slightly with decreasing temperature, and the different phases of ice under pressure, but nothing on density.

  1. Inclusion of air

Googling for pressure ice density the (my) first search finds Density of glacier ice at the International Glaciological Society. This focuses on air in glaciers making the density lower, and concludes that at larger depths we reach that 0.92 limit.

What would be a good average to take?

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Jan Doggen
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