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Unusual hailstones

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2017

P. S. Vadilo*
Affiliation:
Pelutova 17, kv. 53, Leningrad, L–206 U.S.S.R.
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Abstract

Type
Correspondence
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1969

Sir, Unusual hailstones

On 20 May 1938 in Leningrad near the Finnish railway station, hail was falling. It lasted only three minutes, but the hailstones were very unusual. They were about 7 × 10 mm in size, and each hailstone was in the form of a hexagonal pyramid which consisted of six pyramids (one inside the other). Three pyramids were of transparent ice, the other three of milk-white ice (Fig. 1). Each milk-white pyramid consisted of sub-individuals (minute hillocks of growth) with air bubbles amongst them.

Fig. 1. Shape of hailstones observed in Leningrad, 20 May 1958. Each hailstone consisted of a series of pyramids alternately milk-white and transparent. Size 7 × 10 mm.

If an alum crystal is placed in a highly supersaturated solution of alum (about 1 kg l−1), the crystal becomes covered by sub-individuals and becomes milk-white. If it is put into a slightly supersaturated solution (3 g l−1), the sub-individuals disappear and a transparent layer is formed on the surface.

It is obvious that the pyramidal hailstones described above grew in a slightly and highly supersaturated water vapour environment. When they grew in the highly supersaturated water vapour, sub-individuals formed and the hailstones became milk-white; when they grew in the slightly supersaturated environment the sub-individuals disappeared and the hailstones became transparent at the surface.

On 17 July 1959 in Moscow during a hailstorm lasting several minutes, the hailstones were disc-shaped. Their diameter was 12 mm, and their thickness 2 mm. They consisted of concentric white and transparent rings

8 November 1968

Figure 0

Fig. 1. Shape of hailstones observed in Leningrad, 20 May 1958. Each hailstone consisted of a series of pyramids alternately milk-white and transparent. Size 7 × 10 mm.