Frost
flowers are found in Ozark Mountains, also called
Ozark Plateau, heavily forested group of highlands
in the south-central United States, extending
southwestward from St. Louis, Mo, to the Arkansas River
.
A frost flower is a name commonly given to a condition in which thin layers of ice are extruded from long-stemmed plants in autumn or early winter. The thin layers of ice are often formed into exquisite patterns that curl into "petals" that resemble flowers |
It is as beautiful
as it is rare. A frost flower is created on autumn or early
winter mornings when ice in extremely thin layers is pushed out
from the stems of plants or occasionally wood. This
extrusion creates wonderful patterns which curl and fold into
gorgeous frozen petioles giving this phenomenon both its name
and its appearance.
As the temperature
gets to freezing or below the sap in the stem of the plants will
expand. As it does so the outer lay er of the stem comes under
increasing pressure and microscopically thin cracks, known as
linear fissures, begin to form. These will finally give way
under the pressure of the sap and split open.
Water is
continuously being drawn up the plant's stem while the ground
remains unfrozen. It travels up the plants external structural
axis (stem) and reaches the split or splits. As it does so, it
oozes slowly out and it freezes. Yet more water is coming behind
it.
This new water
reaches the cracks and it too freezes, pushing the previous
slither of ice away from the stem. In this manner the amazing
'petals' that you see in these pictures are formed.
Incredibly, the
frost flower effect can happen to wood even when it has been
made in to a fence or a gate, as seen above. In this case the
water is extruded through the pores in the wood rather than
cracks.
The frost flower
has a number of other names: you may know them as frost castles,
ice castles, ice blossoms, or even the very scientific sounding
crystallofolia. Yet the name is something of a misnomer: frost
is created by water vapor. Frost flower, on the other hand, are
formed from liquid water.
If you come across
one – be careful! Rather than attempt to pick it up, if you have
a camera or a phone with you take a picture instead. Frost
flowers are incredibly delicate and will more often than not
shatter when touched.