Ice shelf photograph

Ice Shelf

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About Ice Shelf


An ice shelf is a thick suspended platform of ice that forms where a glacier or ice sheet flows down to a coastline and onto the ocean surface. Ice shelves are only found in Antarctica, Greenland, Canada, and the Russian Arctic.

A23a: World's biggest iceberg on the move after 30 years

A23a: World's biggest iceberg on the move after 30 years
Nov 23,2023 10:01 pm

... A23a was part of a mass outbreak of bergs from the White Continent s Filchner Ice Shelf...

Sea-level rise: West Antarctic ice shelf melt 'unavoidable'

Sea-level rise: West Antarctic ice shelf melt 'unavoidable'
Oct 23,2023 12:01 pm

... The authors caution that further work is needed to increase confidence in its conclusions, but the findings are significant because of how Ice Shelf melting affects the rest of West Antarctica...

Antarctic ocean currents heading for collapse- report

Antarctic ocean currents heading for collapse- report
Mar 29,2023 11:30 pm

... The study also highlighted how warming oceans could trigger greater melting of the western Antarctica Ice Shelf, but it did not examine how this could create a feedback effect, and even more melting...

How a colossal block of ice became an obsession

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Jan 15,2022 5:22 am

... The first picture captures the definitive and distinctive outline of the berg in the days immediately after it broke from the edge of Antarctica s Amery Ice Shelf...

'The closest thing on Earth to interplanetary travel'

'The closest thing on Earth to interplanetary travel'
Feb 16,2020 9:25 am

... By the time the C-17 cargo plane skids to a halt on the Ross Ice Shelf we re already late - snow on the runway has set us back a day...

Denman Glacier: Deepest point on land found in Antarctica

Denman Glacier: Deepest point on land found in Antarctica
Feb 16,2020 9:07 am

... If something happened to the Ross Sea Ice Shelf - and right now it s fine, but if something happened - it will most likely not trigger the collapse of East Antarctica through these gates ...

Yikes! Fox and rodent-battle is top wildlife photo

Yikes! Fox and rodent-battle is top wildlife photo
Feb 16,2020 7:10 am

... More than 5,000 Emperor penguins gather in their classic huddle formation, the wind hit, and in the late winter cold on the sea-ice in front of the Ekström Ice Shelf in East Antarctica...

315 billion-tonne iceberg breaks off Antarctica

315 billion-tonne iceberg breaks off Antarctica
Feb 16,2020 6:43 am

...The EU s Sentinel-1 satellite system captured these before and after images The Amery Ice Shelf in Antarctica has just produced its biggest iceberg in more than 50 years...

A23a: World's biggest iceberg on the move after 30 years

Feb 15,2020 9:28 pm

By Jonathan AmosScience correspondent

The world's biggest iceberg is on The Move after More Than 30 years being stuck to The Ocean floor.

A23a, as it's called, calved from the Antarctic coastline in 1986, but almost immediately grounded in the Weddell Sea to become, 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.

A23a was part of a mass outbreak of bergs from the White Continent's Filchner Ice Shelf .

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 .

Like most icebergs from the Weddell sector, A23a will almost certainly be ejected into the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, which will throw it towards The South Atlantic on a path That has become known as " iceberg alley".

This is the same movement of Water - and accompanying westerlies - That the famous explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton exploited in 1916 to make his escape from Antarctica following The Loss of his ship, the Endurance, in crushing sea-ice.

Shackleton aimed his lifeboat for South Georgia, and it's at this island That you will frequently see the big tabular bergs sitting offshore. The blocks' keels mean they have a tendency to get pinned on The British Overseas Territory's shallow Continental Shelf .

Eventually, all bergs, however big, are doomed to melt and wither away.

Scientists will be following A23a's progress closely.

If it does ground at South Georgia, it might cause problems for The Millions of seals, penguins and other seabirds That breed on The Island . A23a's great bulk could disrupt The Animals ' normal foraging routes, preventing them from feeding their young properly.

But it would be wrong to think of icebergs as being just objects of Danger - Titanic and All That . There's a growing recognition of their importance to the wider environment.

As these big bergs melt, they release the mineral dust That was incorporated into their ice when they were part of glaciers scraping along The Rock bed of Antarctica. This dust is a source of nutrients for the organisms That form The Base of ocean Food Chains .

" In many ways these icebergs are life-giving; they are The Origin point for a lot of biological activity, " said Dr Catherine Walker , from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, who was born in the same year as A23a. " I identify with it; it's always been there for me. "

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Source of news: bbc.com

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