The world’s largest iceberg is still on the move and there are fears that it could be headed north from Antarctica towards the island of South Georgia.
It’s also a natural process happening more frequently because of human-caused climate change, said British Antarctic Survey ...
The world’s largest iceberg, A23a, is drifting northward from Antarctica, potentially threatening South Georgia, a British ...
Meanwhile, Mark Belchier, director of fisheries and environment for the government of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands ... of the fossil fuel-driven climate crisis.
The world's largest iceberg is on a collision course with a remote British island, potentially putting penguins and seals in ...
The world’s largest iceberg, A23a, is heading north from Antarctica toward South Georgia, a British Overseas Territory in the ...
This isn't the first huge iceberg to threaten South Georgia and Sandwich Islands ... and volatile levels of sea ice. Climate change is unlikely to have been behind the birth of A23a because ...
For over 30 years, the A23a iceberg stayed anchored to the Antarctic Weddell Sea floor before it shrank and lost its grip on the seafloor which turned it into a massive floating fragment of ice. The ...