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Ground frost

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Ground frost in the highest town in Venezuela, Apartaderos (Mérida state). Because its location in an alpine tundra ecosystem called páramo, they often undergo a sudden and drastic change in a daily freeze-and-thaw cycle, sometimes described as "summer every day and winter every night."

Ground frost refers to the various coverings of ice produced by the direct deposition of water vapor on objects and trees, whose surfaces have a temperature below the freezing point of water (0 °C, 32 °F).[1]

Types

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The three main types of ground frost are radiation frost (hoar frost), advection frost (advection hoar frost) and evaporation frost. The latter is a rare type which occurs when surface moisture evaporates into drier air causing its temperature at the surface to fall at or under the freezing point of water.[1] Rime (both soft and hard) is technically not a type of ground frost.

Alternative definition

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Ground frost may also refer to the condition when the temperature of the upper layer of the soil falls below the freezing point of water.[1]

In England

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From 1906 to 1960 the Met Office practice was to base the number of days of ground frost on this criterion: a day with a minimum temperature reaching 30 °F (−1 °C), probably because 32 °F (0 °C) was not considered enough cold to cause damage to growing plants. Since 1961 the statistics have referred to the number of days with grass minimum temperature below 0°C. Occasionally, the term ground frost can still be seen, but it means simply a minimum temperature below 0 °C.[2]

In Finland

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Typical ground frost damage in asphalt

Typical depth of frost in Finland is 0–200 cm in winter. If the frost does not melt completely during the summer, it is called permafrost.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c International Meteorological Vocabulary. Geneva: Secretariat of the World Meteorological Organization. 1992.
  2. ^ D.H. McIntosh, ed. (1972). Meteorological Glossary. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office.