Thousands of Glorious ‘Ice Eggs’ Wash Up on Finnish Beach

Ice eggs along shoreline

An amateur photographer photographed the “ice eggs” lining a beach in Finland.

Smooth balls of ice rolled ashore on a beach in Finland and piled up like a gigantic clutch of turtles’ eggs.

But where did these “ice eggs” come from? Turns out, the frigid orbs were sculpted by a peculiar combination of weather and waves, according to news reports. 

Amateur photographer Risto Mattila stumbled upon the strange sight while walking with his wife on Hailuoto Island, a land mass between Finland and Sweden, according to BBC News. The temperature hovered around 32 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 1 degree Celsius) that day, he said, and the wind whipped across the beach. “There, we found this amazing phenomenon. There was snow and ice eggs along the beach near the water line,” he told the BBC.  

Snow ball sea. Lumipallomeri. 3.11.2019, Hailuoto, Marjaniemi, Finland. #sea #meri #hailuoto #marjaniemi #ylesaa #mtvsaa #yleluonto #uusiluontokuva #ig_finland #igscandinavia #olympussuomi #finland_photolovers #finland_frames #beautiofsuomi #ig_naturelovers #naturephotography #natureperfection #top_world_nature #suomenluonto #thebestoffinland #forecasuomi #pohjoisenluontokuvaajat #thisisfinland Risto Mattila

A photo posted by @rismatti on Nov 3, 2019 at 10:08am PST

The “ice eggs” littered an area the length of about one-quarter of a football field and ranged in size from that of an average chicken egg to that of a hefty soccer ball, Mattila said. He snapped a photo, noting that he had “never seen anything like this during 25 years living in the vicinity.”

Others came upon the ice eggs, too. “This was [an] amazing phenomenon, [I’ve] never seen before. The whole beach was full of these ice balls,” Tarja Terentjeff, who lives in the nearby town of Oulu, told CNN. Another local, Sirpa Tero, told CNN she’d seen icy orbs line the shoreline before, “but not over such a large area.” 

Although fairly rare, these ice eggs form similarly to sea glass or rounded stones that wash up on the beach, said BBC Weather expert George Goodfellow. Chunks of ice break off from larger ice sheets in the sea and either taxi to shore on the incoming tide or get pushed in by gusts of wind at the water’s surface, he explained. Waves buffet the ice chunks as they travel, slowly eroding their jagged edges into smooth curves. Seawater sticks and freezes to the forming eggs, causing them to grow like snowballs do as they roll across the ground. 

Once the ice chunks reach shore, pounding waves tend to buff out any lingering kinks on their surfaces, leaving behind nothing but sleek and shiny “eggs” for curious tourists to happen upon.

 

Nicoletta Lanese

Nicoletta Lanese is a science journalist and dancer who aims to bring science to new audiences, whether in print or on stage. She holds degrees in neuroscience and dance from the University of Florida and a graduate certificate in science communication from the University of California, Santa Cruz. Brains are her beat. Follow her on Twitter @NicolettaML. 

Sourse: www.livescience.com

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