For some of us, watching ice cubes slowly melt in our drinks during 100° degree weather is oddly satisfying. Well, ice cube enthusiasts can now marvel at it on a more grandiose scale.
Image credits: Rita Willaert (not the actual photo)
A colossal iceberg broke off of the Amery Ice Shelf in Antarctica on September 26th. D28, or the “Loose Tooth” as it is affectionately known, covers an area of 1,582km² & weighs in at approx. 315 billion tonnes.
Image credits: CopernicusEU
To put this in perspective, it’s larger than the entire Faeroe Island Archipelago & just a bit bigger than the city of Bangkok, Thailand. Talk about an icebreaker!
Image credits: helenafricker
The breaking of the ice (also known as calving) is a natural process whereby the ice shelf loses a chunk of its glaciers, this way balancing the amount of snow that collects upstream.
Scientists predicted that the Loose Tooth would break off eventually & monitored the progress over the years.
Prof Helen Fricker from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, reassures that this event is not the result of climate change as satellite records show environmental balance in the Amery Ice Shelf
Image credits: StefLhermitte
from Bored Panda https://ift.tt/2mxKdxI
via IFTTT