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‘Hair Ice’ Covered a South Carolina Park Like Beautiful, Gossamer Trash

Author: Jessica Leigh Hester / Source: Atlas Obscura

The delicate-looking ice is a fleeting wonder.
The delicate-looking ice is a fleeting wonder.

At first, Dawn Weaver thought she was looking at wind-tousled trash. It was the end of November, just before sunrise, and Weaver—a ranger and park manager at Musgrove Mill, a South Carolina historic site where a Revolutionary War battle once took place—was on her morning patrol route.

When she rounded a curb in her park-issued pickup and spied little white blobs strewn near the roads running beside the Enoree River, Weaver assumed she’d have to go back for her bucket and pinchers. “I thought, ‘Oh no, it’s toilet paper,” she says.

She put her flashers on and climbed out of the car for a closer look. That’s when she noticed it wasn’t trash at all: She was looking at swirls of ice, comprised of strands less than a millimeter wide.

This is a fleeting phenomenon often known as “hair ice.” From a distance, the frozen whorls can look like the fuzzy, puffy guts of a mattress turned out atop leaf litter. Up close, they appeared even lighter and more gossamer—like bunches of tulle, or a clump of cotton…

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