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Giant icebergs once scraped the seafloor near Britain, offering clues about ancient ice shelves and future sea-level rise.
Icebergs as large as cities, potentially tens of kilometres wide, once roved the coasts of the UK, according to scientists.
A new study reveals there was a time when massive icebergs, like the ones we see in Antarctica today, were drifting less than ...
Scientists have found scour marks on the seabed made by giant icebergs about 18,000 years ago, and they could offer clues to ...
The underbelly of massive "tabular" icebergs that dragged across the North Sea seabed between 18,000 and 20,000 years ago ...
Beneath the surface of the Southern Ocean, vast volumes of cold, dense water plunge off the Antarctic continental shelf, cascading down underwater cliffs to the ocean floor thousands of meters below.
The findings, published in the journal Nature Communications, show that during the last ice age—about 18,000 to 20,000 years ...
Scientists have recently uncovered evidence of massive ancient icebergs that once drifted across the North Sea around 18,000 ...
Icebergs as large as cities, potentially tens of kilometres wide, once roved the coasts of the UK, according to scientists. Researchers found distinctive scratch marks left by the drifting ...
An overall warming trend has been observed in the Antarctic continent by scientists over a long term with the speed 0.12 C ...