névé

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English

Etymology

Borrowed from French névé, from the Franco-Provençal (Savoyard) term névi (mass of snow), from Latin nix, nivis (snow).

Pronunciation

Noun

névé (plural névés)

  1. The firn or snowfield at the head of a glacier.
    • 1913, R. F. Scott, chapter XVIII, in Leonard Huxley, editor, Scott's Last Expedition, volume I, Monday, December 25:
      Then we started up a rise, and to our annoyance found ourselves amongst crevasses once more—very hard, smooth névé between high ridges at the edge of crevasses, and therefore very difficult to get foothold to pull the sledges.
  2. (glaciology) Young, granular snow on a glacier, which has been partially melted and refrozen since deposition, but has not yet turned into firn by surviving a full season of ablation.
    • 1972 April 27, D. R. Oldroyd, “Haast's glacial theories and the opinions of his European contemporaries”, in Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, volume 3, number 1, Taylor & Francis, →DOI, archived from the original on 2024-05-27, page 9:
      Haast's 1864 paper does not explain exactly why the glaciers should have come and gone as they did, but it appears that he believed that the onset of glaciation was due to the formation of his "high, plateau-like" range of mountains, acting as a moisture trap, with consequent névé accumulation on a grand scale.
    • 1989 January, A. N. Salamatin, A. B. Mazo, “Dynamics of a nonstationary dome glacier in the two-dimensional approximation”, in Journal of Soviet Mathematics, volume 44, Springer, →DOI, archived from the original on 2018-06-05, page 38:
      The rate of snow-névé accumulation may change many times during the glacier lifetime due to changes in climatic conditions or other factors. Calculations show that the glacier responds fairly quickly to such changes.

Translations

Further reading

Anagrams

French

Etymology

Borrowed from Franco-Provençal névi.

Pronunciation

Noun

névé m (plural névés)

  1. névé

Descendants

  • English: névé

Further reading