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Images 4 to 6 of 6
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Monadnock Winter - White Dot Rimed Rocks
On the flat surfaces, the icy snow forms a smooth and flat surface. On the sides out of the wind, the turbulence causes accumulation to become rough and patterned. While the scale of the rocks is impossible to tell from the photo, the rock to the right is about a foot high. A root or stick is frozen into the surface in the right foreground.
See also…
1/1/1990
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Monadnock Winter - White Dot Rimed Cairn
The winds in this storm are so strong that the rime only forms on the portions of the rock protected from the wind, or where the wind and moisture slam directly into a rock surface. The rime is actually forming tiny windswept icicles on the lee side of the rock. On a couple of rocks, the rime has formed a collar around the edge of the rock's leeward face. The texture on the ground is formed by the granular snow and ice.
See also…
1/1/1990
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Monadnock Winter - Sue and Dan In The Worst Weather On The White Dot
This picture is not far from the summit. The winds are estimated at 60-70 mph. We can barely see or hear each other and the landscape beyond about thirty feet is invisible.
1/1/1990
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