An aerial view of Iceberg A23a during a British Royal Air Force on November 24, 2024 in the South Atlantic Ocean near South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands. A23a, the world's largest iceberg, ...
Simulating a half century of movement and degradation of plastic waste in the ocean, a new study estimates that nearly two-thirds of ocean plastics are outside the reach of current monitoring methods.
Beneath Antarctica’s vanished Larsen C Ice Shelf, scientists have uncovered a hidden world: thousands of perfectly circular ...
An iceberg the size of Luxembourg has broken off from a glacier in Antarctica after being rammed by another giant iceberg, scientists said Friday, in an event that could affect ocean circulation ...
Ships plying the frigid waters near the Antarctic Peninsula, south of South America, will need to keep an eye on their radar for a floating island of ice: "The largest iceberg in the world, A-23a, is ...
The world's largest iceberg, A23a, is stuck again. For more than 30 years, the giant frozen block — equivalent to the size of Rhode Island — was grounded on the sea floor in Antarctic coastal waters.
When the massive A68A iceberg snapped off its ice shelf in July 2017, it was the sixth-largest iceberg on record. Now more than half of it is gone. A study published on January 10 in the journal ...
Fractures in an Antarctic iceberg were likely caused by rapid changes in the currents that flow through the Southern Ocean. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate ...
Fox Weather on MSN
World’s largest iceberg on possible collision course with island in South Atlantic Ocean
A massive iceberg, known as A23a, is on an apparent collision course with South Georgia Island, a British territory in the South Atlantic Ocean. The giant sheet of ice, which originally broke off from ...
An iceberg the size of Rhode Island is on the move again after spending months trapped in a whirling ocean vortex. The iceberg, named A23a, measured 1,505 square miles in area in February this year, ...
Fractures in an Antarctic iceberg were likely caused by rapid changes in the currents that flow through the Southern Ocean. A swift change in ocean currents in the Southern Ocean likely snapped one of ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results