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I'm reasonably convinced now that Iceberg A23a has completely collapsed. The USNIC is no longer tracking a berg of that name. But A23k (also not listed) does however lumber on, albeit in a disheveled state. This view is from Thursday (9 April) NOAA-21 VIIRS. usicecenter.gov/Products/Ant...
2mo
A small silver lining: Yes, NASA and NOAA did not do briefings for their global temp data sets released today. And they certainly do not emphasize the human causes. But they *did* release them. The work is still happening. data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/grap... www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/monit...
🌊❄️ When Antarctic glaciers collapse into the sea, they can trigger huge underwater tsunamis that mix the ocean, affecting ice loss, climate and ecosystems. The project I lead on this is now in the field and featured on Sky News: news.sky.com/story/underw... #Antarctic #OceanMixing #ClimateScience
One big paddling pool becomes three. Today's view of iceberg A23a (left) and a view from the end of December (right). Notice how the raised rim effect, holding in surface meltwater, has re-established on all three main segments of the broken berg. A23a is turning to slush puppie.
Iceberg A23a today (17 Feb). A totally clear sky. Utterly stunning. Still refusing to die. Still 500 sq km in area. Image from the Modis instrument on the venerable Aqua satellite, another oldie that's still plugging away.
The last two big fragments of the once mighty A23 iceberg. The US National Ice Center calls the bottom-left object A23k and the top-right, A23a. Its latest report (20/3/26) said both were about 140 sq km. Latitude is roughly 50 deg S.
The landscape hidden beneath Antarctica's ice sheet has been mapped from space for the first time. Scientists used hi‑res satellite observations to track how the continent’s frozen surface bunches and dips as it moves over the rugged rock bed below. www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
End days for Iceberg A23. The two largest remaining fragments - A and K - had major blowouts on or just after the 28th of March. The largest chunks are ~50 sq km. A23 calved from the Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf in 1986. Quite the journey it's had over four decades.
These subtle ripples have revealed the presence of thousands of previously unknown hills, valleys, ridges and ancient river systems. New paper in Science Magazine from Helen Ockenden et al. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
5mo
5mo
5mo
💥 Boom! And it's just happened. The huge volumes of meltwater that had collected on the surface of iceberg A23a have triggered a massive and catastrophic hydrofracture event. Much of the berg has turned to mush. Three major segments remain, the largest about 500 sq km.
3mo
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Jonathan Amos
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Jonathan Amos
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Jonathan Amos
Paul Voosen
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Jonathan Amos
Prof Michael Meredith 🌊🧪🥼❄️