Scientists are stunned to find an iceberg - which is twice as big as Greater London - continuously spinning on one spot for the last eight months near Antarctica. The world's largest iceberg A23a ...
The world's largest iceberg, called A23a, more than twice the size of London and weighing about billion tonnes, is drifting away. It's currently heading for the Atlantic. After clinging to the ...
It is more than twice the size of Greater London. But the world's largest iceberg, known as A23a, is starting to crumble. Satellite images reveal that an enormous chunk has broken off the ...
The world’s largest iceberg is on the move again after being stuck for 30 years in the Weddell Sea. A23a is 3900 square kilometres in area, making it more than twice the size of Greater London ...
A huge iceberg, some 1550 km², almost the size of Greater London, has broken off the 150m thick Brunt Ice Shelf. It calved after cracks that have been developing naturally over the last few years ...
The iceberg is spinning northwards from Antarctica ... 1,312ft (400m), taller than the Shard in London. It once measured 3,900 sq km, but the latest satellite pictures show it is slowly decaying.
Spanning an area of 3,672 square kilometers (1,418 square miles) when measured in August — slightly smaller than Rhode Island and more than twice the size of London — the A23a iceberg has been ...
An curved arrow pointing right. Housing space in London is at a premium, so those that can afford it are expanding their homes by building huge "iceberg basements" underground. Produced by Joe Daunt.
The colossal iceberg -- which is more than twice the size of Greater London and weighs nearly one trillion tons -- had largely stayed intact since it started slowly moving north in 2020. It has been ...
The world's biggest iceberg -- three time the size of New York City -- could drift towards a remote island where a scientist warns it risks disrupting feeding for baby penguins and seals.
The world's biggest iceberg -- more than twice the size of London -- could drift towards a remote island where a scientist warns it risks disrupting feeding for baby penguins and seals.
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