Adam LeWinter on the rim of Birthday Canyon on the
Greenland Ice Sheet. The black deposit in the bottom of channel is
cryoconite. Birthday Canyon is approximately 150 feet deep.
The photo comes from a small gallery at The Guardian depicting scenes of glacial melting in the Arctic. Second gallery.
Blogged for the stark beauty, but it also prompted me to look up what "cryoconite" is.
Cryoconite
is powdery windblown dust which is deposited and builds up on snow,
glaciers, or icecaps. It contains small amounts of soot which absorbs
solar radiation melting the snow or ice beneath the deposit sometimes
creating a cryoconite hole.
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