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After Breaking Free, World’s Largest Iceberg Is Stuck Spinning in Circles

4 weeks ago 21



Science|After Breaking Free, World’s Largest Iceberg Is Stuck Spinning in Circles

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/07/science/a23a-iceberg-antarctica-spinning.html

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Round and round a city-size iceberg goes, stuck in a vortex over an underwater mountain. When it will stop, nobody knows.

The squared-off edge of a huge iceberg rises out of the water under heavy gray clouds.
The world’s largest iceberg, named A23a, near Antarctica in April.Credit...Derren Fox, British Antarctic Survey

Remy Tumin

Published Aug. 7, 2024Updated Aug. 9, 2024, 11:22 a.m. ET

For more than 30 years, the world’s largest iceberg was stuck in the Antarctic. Five times the size of New York City’s land area and more than 1,000 feet deep, the mammoth piece of ice finally became loose in 2020 and began a slow drift toward the Southern Ocean.

Now, A23a, as it’s known, is spinning in place.

After leaving Antarctic waters, the iceberg got stuck in a vortex over a seamount, or an underwater mountain. Imagine a piece of ice about 1,500 square miles in area and as deep as the Empire State Building spinning slowly but steadily enough to fully rotate it on its head over the course of about 24 days.

The iceberg is spinning near the South Orkney Islands, about 375 miles northeast of the Antarctic Peninsula, “maintaining a chill 15 degree rotation per day,” the British Antarctic Survey, the United Kingdom’s polar research institute, said on social media.

Image

Animation produced by the Mapping and Geographic Information Centre using satellite imagery shows the A23a iceberg spinning near the South Orkney Islands, from March 22 to Aug. 1, 2024.Credit...British Antarctic Survey

“It’s basically just sitting there, spinning around and it will very slowly melt as long as it stays there,” said Alex Brearley, a physical oceanographer and head of the Open Oceans research group at the British Antarctic Survey. “What we don’t know is how quickly it will actually come out of this.”

A23a has been embroiled in drama since the start, a trait it picked up from its parent-berg.

A23, which was even bigger than A23a, was one of three icebergs that broke off, or calved, from the Filchner Ice Shelf in 1986. At the time of the calving, A23 was home to a Soviet Union research center and researchers eventually had to abandon the base. A23a broke off later that year and hit bottom in the Weddell Sea, where it would remain for 34 more years.


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