The world’s biggest iceberg — a 40-metre-tall wall of ice bigger in area than the Australian Capital Territory — is steadily drifting towards a remote British island off a tip of Antarctica, six weeks after breaking loose from its sea floor grounding.
The slab of ice — named A23a and described as a megaberg — weighs almost one trillion tonnes and could slam into South Georgia Island before either getting stuck or being guided around the land by currents.
If it gets stuck, the iceberg could make it hard for parents of baby penguins on the island to feed their young and some could starve.
While scientists and researchers aren’t yet concerned about the potential damage the iceberg could cause, some have voiced their excitement about a natural process involving A23a which they say is happening more frequently because of human-caused climate change.
Calving icebergs are normal, but they are happening more frequently as the climate changes and more fresh water flows into oceans, according to Andrew Meijers, a physical oceanographer with the British Antarctic Survey.
Mr Meijers examined the iceberg up close in December, 2023, when it first drifted past the research ship RRS Sir David Attenborough.
He said for every bit of the iceberg visible above the water’s surface, there was ten-times more ice more below.
-The iceberg is making its way at a glacial pace of a metre every three to seven seconds, Mr Meijers said.
In the next two to four weeks, the iceberg will approach South Georgia Island and could be wedged in the shallow shelf off the British territory, or could be diverted around it, according to the oceanographer.
Eventually, A23a will break up and melt as icebergs typically do, but the bigger concern for researchers now is the impact it could have on penguins in their summer breeding cycle, Mr Meijers said.
This iceberg first broke off from Antarctic in 1986 but has been penned in a crowded patch of sea ice for decades.
On December 13 last year, the British Antarctic Survey announced that the mega iceberg had broken free from its latest sea floor grounding and was drifting in the Southern Ocean.
ABC/AP
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