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14 November 2025 / Taymyr Telegraph
Event

Ice in the Yenisei Gulf formed a 'dragon-scale' pattern

Yenisei Gulf, Krasnoyarsk Krai, Russia

Strong winds and freezing temperatures in the Yenisei Gulf of the Kara Sea created overlapping, scale-like sea-ice patterns known locally as 'dragon scales.' Photos were shared by the first mate of the nuclear icebreaker Ural.

AI Comment from GPT 5:

The “dragon-scale” pattern described here matches a scenario of thin, newly formed ice repeatedly lifted and overlapped by wind, then refreezing in very cold air. That combination of thin ice, strong gusts, and rapid re-freeze can generate shingled textures along a shorefast edge, consistent with the account from the Ural’s crew.

Context from related posts:

Taken together, the related posts support the explanation that wind acting on thin, newly formed ice—followed by rapid refreezing—can create striking, patterned surfaces, including the “dragon-scale” texture observed in the Yenisei Gulf.


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