The iceberg’s sides are 1,312 feet tall, and its surface area is currently a whopping 1,350 square miles, which is greater ...
The world's largest iceberg, A23a, is on a collision course with South Georgia Island, raising alarms for local wildlife.
The world's largest iceberg is on a collision course with a remote British island, potentially putting penguins and seals in ...
An enormous chunk has broken off the world's largest iceberg, in a possible first sign the behemoth from Antarctica could be ...
The iceberg, called A23a, was previously “trapped” spinning around an undersea mountain for several months, according to Andrew Meijers, a physical oceanographer at the British Antarctic Survey.
Roughly 1,550 square miles across, the world's biggest and oldest iceberg, known as A23a, calved from the Antarctic shelf in 1986. Before its calving in 1986, the colossal iceberg hosted a Soviet ...
As of Jan. 16, the megaberg, known as A23a, is roughly 180 miles (290 kilometers) away from South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, according to location coordinates from the U.S. National ...
The behemoth, dubbed A23a, poses a potential threat to the island’s delicate ecosystem. Scientists are monitoring A23a closely, anticipating two possible scenarios: the iceberg could collide ...
The world's largest iceberg looks set to collide with a group of remote islands in the southern Atlantic, risking the safety of wildlife in a region renowned for rich biodiversity that surpasses even ...
The world’s largest iceberg called A23a reportedly is on the move in the Atlantic Ocean. Its direction of movement has triggered assumptions that while heading north from the coast of Antarctica ...
The iceberg, A23a, broke free from its position north of the South Orkney Islands last month and is now heading towards South Georgia, where it could crash into the island. Researchers tracking ...