Weddell Sea photograph

Weddell Sea

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About Weddell Sea


The Weddell Sea is part of the Southern Ocean and contains the Weddell Gyre. Its land boundaries are defined by the bay formed from the coasts of Coats Land and the Antarctic Peninsula. The easternmost point is Cape Norvegia at Princess Martha Coast, Queen Maud Land.

Sir David Attenborough polar ship has monster iceberg encounter

Sir David Attenborough polar ship has monster iceberg encounter
Dec 4,2023 8:41 am

... But during the past year, currents and winds have driven the frozen block rapidly across the Weddell Sea...

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, 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...

Antarctica sea-ice hits new record low

Antarctica sea-ice hits new record low
Feb 16,2023 8:31 pm

... Only the Weddell Sea remains dominated by frozen floes...

Endurance: 'Finest wooden shipwreck I've ever seen'

Endurance: 'Finest wooden shipwreck I've ever seen'
Mar 9,2022 2:12 pm

...Endurance, the lost ship of Anglo-Irish explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton, has finally been identified on the floor of Antarctica s Weddell Sea...

Shackleton's Endurance: The impossible search for the greatest shipwreck

Shackleton's Endurance: The impossible search for the greatest shipwreck
Feb 4,2022 3:48 am

... The frozen floes that squeezed, snapped and then swallowed his polar steam yacht in the Weddell Sea between October and November 1915 smother its grave and protect it from discovery...

How a colossal block of ice became an obsession

How a colossal block of ice became an obsession
Jan 15,2022 5:22 am

... It s now entered the Weddell Sea which is directly south of the Atlantic Ocean...

Anyone ever Shackleton found lost the ship?

Anyone ever Shackleton found lost the ship?
Apr 22,2020 4:07 am

... This is the conclusion of scientists to find the, the endurance, which sank in 3,000 m of water in the Weddell Sea in 1915...

315 billion-tonne iceberg breaks off Antarctica

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

... This is roughly Amery to the Eastern Weddell Sea...

How a colossal block of ice became an obsession

Feb 16,2020 2:54 am

Did you develop an obsession during lockdown? Did those long weeks and months take you down surprising avenues? Where did your mind wander?

The found himself thinking about Antarctica And One particularly large chunk of Ice . He'd read an article, about a 300-billion-tonne Iceberg That had recently calved from The East of The Continent . D28, it's called; although That 's not its only name as I'll explain.

Kevin's interest was piqued by the satellite images That scientists began publishing of this berg, along with the sometimes surprising colours they would choose to render scenes and emphasise contrast.

" It started out quite small. Just little studies, " The Artist recalls.

" I found myself taking images That I'd see of D28, dropping them into Photoshop, and making colour samples. I was basically making pantones from Antarctica based on images That were being circulated around The Internet .

" I spent weeks mixing the paint to match these colours. I guess it was a form of meditation. And Then I was bound to the studio, and so it just started developing Into Something . "

That something is a series of four oil paintings depicting The Life of D28. 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 Ones That follow are from Kevin's imagination.

The series marks The Years 2019, 2021, 2023, and 2025. We don't know when That final, speculative view will occur, but it will happen eventually. Icebergs are born to wither and melt Away .

Those People who've seen the series have had various reactions, but some of the themes are common. You won't be surprised to learn That when asked to describe an emotion or feeling, The Words That viewers used included " " " " " " " " " " " " " " " " and " ".

And, quite naturally, Kevin's D28 journey has brought Environmental Issues - and The Loss of Ice - to the forefront of his mind. Being in Switzerland, this is a very topical concern. in our warming climate, prompting local people to blanket the Ice streams in Summer to try to protect them.

" If I can produce a work of art That might have some sort of impact, or assist in some way; That might help slow down consumption or make people consider things a little bit more by taking fewer flights, or driving their cars Less - That 's got to be a good way to go, " says Kevin.

My Own interest in D28 goes back to the mid-2000s, long before it calved. At That time That sought to predict which part of this vast, floating wedge of Ice might break first, and when.

Attention had focused on because it looked in satellite images Like a child's wobbly front tooth.

The Team studying the cracks developing in the Ice Shelf thought a calving might be imminent. It wasn't. Loose Tooth is Still There , still wobbling, still hanging on to the Amery. It was The Adjacent , 1,636-sq-km section That came Away - the big berg now formally designated D28 (the largest Antarctic bergs are given an official listing by the ).

I joked with the Amery research team, led by Prof Helen Fricker from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, That perhaps another dental analogy was needed. " It is the molar compared to a baby tooth, " Helen laughed. And the nickname stuck.

People regularly now post satellite pictures of " Molar Berg" aka D28, as it bumps and grinds its way around the Antarctic coast. Even astronauts on the space station can see it, albeit from an oblique angle.

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A keen observer is Dr Catherine Walker from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. As a graduate student in The 2000S , she was tasked with studying those cracks in the Amery Ice Shelf .

" It was actually sort of sad to see it go, because it was something That I'd had all This Time , And Then it was gone, " Catherine tells me.

" I really appreciate Kevin's paintings. I feel Like That 's my entire career right there. "

There's a growing appreciation of these city-sized bergs (Molar Berg was bigger than Greater London when it broke Away ).

They dump huge quantities of fresh water into the wider ocean, along with iron and other minerals scraped off the Antarctic landmass. This influences the behaviour of local currents and food webs.

D28/Molar Berg's travels have taken it a full quarter Turn Around the White Continent. It's now entered the Weddell Sea which is directly south of the Atlantic Ocean .

And it just so happens That it's moving in the direction of what is currently The World 's biggest Iceberg - a near-4,000-sq-km monster known as A23, which has been pinned fast to the Weddell seafloor for three decades.

" Yep, That 's one of mine, too, " says Catherine. " I always watch A23 because we're the same age. It calved in 1986 and it's started to wiggle recently.

" What's the fascination with these giant icebergs? I guess it has something to do with their size; they're so much bigger than you can Imagine - Like Everest or K2. You look at them and wonder: how do they hold themselves together. "

I think That 's right. Their great scale is truly awesome. But for me it's also The Way such imposing objects, built from snows That originally fell on Antarctica thousands of years ago, and which seem as though they ought to be so permanent, can suddenly disintegrate and Fade Away in a very Short Time .

You can follow Jonathan on Twitter :



Source of news: bbc.com

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