“…There, annual ice growth is dominated by the accretion of congelation ice formed as a result of the conduction of heat from the ocean to the atmosphere through the developing ice layer. The cellular sub-structure of ice plates and brine layers, crystal morphology and size variations, and the influence of water currents on the development of preferred crystal caxis orientations in congelation ice have been described by Weeks and Hamilton (1962), Cherepanov ( 1973), Cow and Weeks ( 1977 ), Cow (1978, 1980) Platelet ice has only been observed in Antarctica, where it appears to be commonest in fast ice and coastal pack ice (Paige, 1966;Buynitskiy, 1967;Cherepanov and Kozlovskiy, 1972, 1973a, b, 1977Kozlovskiy and Cherepanov, 1977;Gow and others, 1982;Lange, 1988;Lange and others, 1989;Crocker and Wadhams, 1989;Eicken and Lange, 1989;Kipfstuhl, 1991;Jeffries and Weeks, 1991a, b, in press). This ice type commonly occurs as aggregates of platelets, which either underlie or have become incorporated into congelation ice.…”