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The iceberg that was once the largest in the world has melted into several small fragments that are no longer worth tracking. A68 weighed billions of tons and was bigger than Norfolk when it broke ...
The iceberg that was for a time the biggest in the world is no more. A68, as it was known, covered an area of nearly 6,000 sq km (2,300 sq miles) when it broke away from Antarctica in 2017.
Gigantic iceberg A68 threatens the island of South Georgia, in the South Atlantic Ocean, on December 17, 2020. More recent satellite images suggest that the iceberg has, as predicted, come to rest ...
Named A68, it's one of the largest icebergs on record. This month, the iceberg got a nudge from powerful winds and is now on its way into the nearby Weddell Sea.
Scientists monitoring the giant A68a iceberg from space reveal that a huge amount of freshwater was released as it melted around the sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia. An estimated 152 billion ...
The iceberg, dubbed A68 by scientists, broke off the Larsen C ice shelf sometime between July 10 and July 12, 2017. Researchers had been tracking a growing crack in the ice shelf via satellite for ...
Our mission is to deliver unbiased, fact-based reporting that holds power to account and exposes the truth. Whether $5 or $50, every contribution counts. The iceberg that was once the largest in ...
The iceberg that was for a time the biggest in the world is no more. A68, as it was known, covered an area of nearly 6,000 sq km (2,300 sq miles) when it broke away from Antarctica in 2017.
The iceberg that once the largest in the world has melted into several small fragments that are no longer worth tracking. A68 weighed billions of tonnes and was bigger than the size of Norfolk ...
A68, as it was known, covered an area of nearly 6,000 sq km (2,300 sq miles) when it broke away from Antarctica in 2017. That's like a small country; it's equal to a quarter of the size of Wales ...
The iceberg that was once the largest in the world has melted into several small fragments that are no longer worth tracking. A68 weighed billions of tons and was bigger than Norfolk when it broke ...
The billion-tonne colossus known as A68 has so thoroughly fragmented it's no longer being tracked.