World’s biggest iceberg moving beyond Antarctic
waters
A23a split from the Antarctic’s Filchner Ice Shelf in
1986, but it became stuck to the ocean floor and had remained for many years in
the Weddell Sea
Guardian
staff and agencies
Mon 27 Nov
2023 00.23 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/nov/27/worlds-biggest-iceberg-moving-beyond-antarctic-waters
One of the
world’s largest icebergs is drifting beyond Antarctic waters, after being
grounded for more than three decades, according to the British Antarctic
Survey.
The
iceberg, known as A23a, split from the Antarctic’s Filchner Ice Shelf in 1986.
But it became stuck to the ocean floor and had remained for many years in the
Weddell Sea.
Not any
more. Recent satellite images reveal that the iceberg, weighing nearly a
trillion metric tonnes, is now drifting quickly past the northern tip of the
Antarctic Peninsula, aided by strong winds and currents.
The iceberg
is about three times the size of New York City and more than twice the size of
Greater London, measuring about 4,000 sq km (1,500 square miles).
Antarctic
fur seal seals are finding it harder to find krill to eat and, as a result,
their numbers have crashed in the last decade.
It’s rare
to see an iceberg of this size on the move, said British Antarctic Survey
glaciologist Oliver Marsh, so scientists will be watching its trajectory
closely.
As it gains
steam, the colossal iceberg will probably be launched into the Antarctic
Circumpolar Current. This will funnel it toward the Southern Ocean on a path
known as “iceberg alley” where others of its kind can be found bobbing in dark
waters. It is not clear why it is making a run for it now.
“Over time
it’s probably just thinned slightly and got that little bit of extra buoyancy
that’s allowed it to lift off the ocean floor and get pushed by ocean
currents,” said Marsh. A23a is also among the world’s oldest icebergs.
Andrew
Fleming, a remote sensing expert from the British Antarctic Survey, told the
BBC on Friday that the iceberg had been drifting for the past year and now
appeared to be picking up speed.
“I asked a
couple of colleagues about this, wondering if there was any possible change in
shelf water temperatures that might have provoked it, but the consensus is the
time had just come,” Fleming told the BBC.
Fleming
said he had first spotted movement from the iceberg in 2020. The British
Antarctic Survey said it had now ungrounded and is moving along ocean currents
to sub-Antarctic South Georgia.
It’s
possible A23a could again become grounded at South Georgia island. That would
pose a problem for Antarctica’s wildlife. Millions of seals, penguins, and
seabirds breed on the island and forage in the surrounding waters. Behemoth
A23a could cut off such access.
In 2020,
another giant iceberg, A68, stirred fears that it would collide with South
Georgia, crushing marine life on the sea floor and cutting off food access.
Such a catastrophe was ultimately averted when the iceberg broke up into
smaller chunks – a possible end game for A23a as well.
But “an
iceberg of this scale has the potential to survive for quite a long time in the
Southern Ocean, even though it’s much warmer, and it could make its way farther
north up toward South Africa where it can disrupt shipping,” said Marsh.
With Reuters and Associated Press
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