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Scientists fear that an iceberg the size of Greater London could soon hit shipping, fishing and wildlife.. Researchers are currently tracking two large icebergs, one named the A81 – the size of ...
An iceberg almost the size of Greater London has broken free from an ice shelf and is floating away from Antarctica. A crack known as Chasm-1, which has been “developing naturally” over the ...
An iceberg nearly the size of Greater London broke off the Brunt Ice Shelf in Antarctica on Sunday according to the British Antarctic Survey.. Scientists first discovered significant cracks in the ...
London's incredible "iceberg" homes boast unimaginable luxury – think artificial beaches and multi-storey waterfalls in your basement – but what do they reveal about the city's future?
A new iceberg that is larger than the size of Greater London broke off of Antarctica's Brunt Ice Shelf on Jan. 22 nears the British Halley Research station.
A giant iceberg almost the size of London has broken off the Brunt Ice Shelf in western Antarctica on Sunday (Jan. 22) after years of cracking.
The world's largest iceberg A23a was caught in a massive rotating cylinder of water, which is called as Taylor Column, in December and since then has been rotating at nearly 15 degrees a day.
ESA likened the iceberg's size to that of Greater London. It's about 620 square miles (1,600 square kilometers) in size. The space agency released a GIF of before-and-after images of the iceberg.
The iceberg, named A23a, is about 400 meters (1,312 feet) thick, and almost 4,000 square kilometers (1,544 square miles) in area. Greater London, by way of comparison, is 1,572 square kilometers ...
In the iceberg’s case, it is due to a 100-km wide bump on the ocean floor called Pirie Bank, creating the water conditions above. The possibility for an iceberg to get stuck spinning is not ...
A newly built subterranean property in the posh London enclave of Hampstead delivers a spin on an old adage: It had nowhere to build but down. Built on a pocket of the city that was previously ...