World's Biggest Iceberg on the Move After 30 Years (bbc.com) 35
The world's biggest iceberg is on the move after more than 30 years being stuck to the ocean floor. From a report: The iceberg, called A23a, split from the Antarctic coastline in 1986. But it swiftly grounded in the Weddell Sea, becoming, essentially, an ice island. At almost 4,000 sq km (1,500 sq miles) in area, it's more than twice the size of Greater London. The past year has seen it drifting at speed, and the berg is now about to spill beyond Antarctic waters. A23a is a true colossus, and it's not just its width that impresses.
This slab of ice is some 400m (1,312 ft) thick. For comparison, the London Shard, the tallest skyscraper in Europe, is a mere 310m tall. At the time, it was hosting a Soviet research station, which just illustrates how long ago its calving occurred. Moscow despatched an expedition to remove equipment from the Druzhnaya 1 base, fearing it would be lost. But the tabular berg didn't move far from the coast before its deep keel anchored it rigidly to the Weddell's bottom-muds.
So, why, after almost 40 years, is A23a on the move now? "I asked a couple of colleagues about this, wondering if there was any possible change in shelf water temperatures that might have provoked it, but the consensus is the time had just come," said Dr Andrew Fleming, a remote sensing expert from the British Antarctic Survey. "It was grounded since 1986 but eventually it was going to decrease (in size) sufficiently to lose grip and start moving. I spotted first movement back in 2020." A23a has put on a spurt in recent months, driven by winds and currents, and is now passing the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula.
This slab of ice is some 400m (1,312 ft) thick. For comparison, the London Shard, the tallest skyscraper in Europe, is a mere 310m tall. At the time, it was hosting a Soviet research station, which just illustrates how long ago its calving occurred. Moscow despatched an expedition to remove equipment from the Druzhnaya 1 base, fearing it would be lost. But the tabular berg didn't move far from the coast before its deep keel anchored it rigidly to the Weddell's bottom-muds.
So, why, after almost 40 years, is A23a on the move now? "I asked a couple of colleagues about this, wondering if there was any possible change in shelf water temperatures that might have provoked it, but the consensus is the time had just come," said Dr Andrew Fleming, a remote sensing expert from the British Antarctic Survey. "It was grounded since 1986 but eventually it was going to decrease (in size) sufficiently to lose grip and start moving. I spotted first movement back in 2020." A23a has put on a spurt in recent months, driven by winds and currents, and is now passing the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula.
Did ice reform (Score:2)
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You are a sexist and genderogenic! You should be ashamed of yourself. My hormone dosage is supervised by the best doctors! I am reporting you to all my friends and wherever I can beginning with this site! You should be cancelled soon enough for all your sexist comments!
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pfft, you're half-assed if you're only taking hormones. Cut your dick and junk off and get back to us, then we'll take you seriously.
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You don't need to cut off your junk to be a top female swimmer.
I vote his junk stays for now.
over here! found one! over here! (Score:2)
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Excuse me. Zhur junk should stay for now.
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The funny thing about posters like this is all their trolling does is reinforce the values they're clearly trolling against as no one likes a troll.
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Not just a troll...they appear unhinged. No one is going to listen to the rantings of a deranged person, but since they are not thinking straight, they fail to realize that to everyone reading their screed are just equating those thought patterns with insanity.
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Units (Score:4, Funny)
it's more than twice the size of Greater London.
What is that in standard Manhattans?
Re:Units (Score:4, Interesting)
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Or in terms of volume, about 500-1000 Sydney Harbours.
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Please convert to Libraries of Congress once you get the Manhattans.
Free freshwater (Score:1)
For anyone who wants to pull it to their coast. And it can last for decades.
Re:Free freshwater (Score:5, Funny)
Most of the countries who would benefit from that would find it easier tow their country to the iceberg.
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I was wondering about that. Could it be towed to Saudi Arabia before it all melted? Would it be more effective to put the diesel fuel to use in desalination instead?
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You'd probably also need a lot of "free" plastic sheeting to reduce losses to melting en route (by reducing water flow near the ice surface underwater) and to reduce the amount of bird shit which you'd have to process out of the "fresh water". Well, for drinking - it'd be OK for agricultural water. Those thousands of square km of sheetin
England units? (Score:2)
How many rugby fields is that?
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lettuce pray (Score:2)
The time has come! The walrus said... (Score:2)
"the time had just come."
- Shit happens
- Was bound to happen sooner or later
- Better late than never
Love the answer. Somebody's trying to corner them into a statement about climate change. Shoulders are shrugged, and the question is poo-poo'd.
This is the way I feel about the whole climate question. Shit's going down, we'll deal. Don't care about causality anymore.
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It was already detached from the ice sheet. Eventually enough was going to melt to get it unstuck from the bottom. Then off it goes by way of wind and current.
Sails (Score:2)
Great, plant hundreds of autonomous motorized sails across its surface and set course for the worst drought-stricken coastline.
Meanwhile, on the Iceberg... (Score:2)
"Ram it. Our Iceberg is invincible."
(Thank you, Zach, for the laughter! "Hubris" [smbc-comics.com])
An impossible opportunity (Score:2)
If someone could just lift it up and place it in the middle of the Saharas, that would be awesome.
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Sorry, but soil science is a lot more complex than the people who created the "Dust Bowl" understood.
Sounds pretty normal to me. (Score:1)
Different masses of ice in the sea drift at different rates at various times, in a manner that is difficult to predict with our current level of knowledge. This is not new. The book about the voyage of the crew of Endurance, goes into a fair amount of detail about this, from the perspective of people who were trapped on the ice for a year or so (until they eventually found a way off) because nobody knew