Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
Observations with improved Roberts current meters, tethered drogues, and fathogram highlights are used to show that Fletcher's Ice Island (T-3), in the Arctic Ocean, often moves in clockwise circles with a diameter of about 1 km and a period of about 12 hours. The motions are inertial oscillations which represent the transient response of a floating ice mass to changing wind stress. Since the winds are often fluctuating, T-3 responds often with inertial motion. The following arguments indicate that these motions are inertial oscillations: (1) the period of the motions is closer to the inertial period, at this latitude, of 12.05 hr than it is to the lunar semidiurnal tidal period of 12.42 hr; (2) the amplitude of the periodic motion and the local wind speed are closely correlated; (3) the phase of the motion changes irregularly with time; and (4) the motion is restricted to the ice and to the uppermost layers of water.
Kenneth Hunkins (Wed,) studied this question.