Worlds largest iceberg moves toward an island off Antarctica where millions of penguins live
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The worlds biggest iceberg a wall of ice the size of Rhode Island is lumbering toward a remote island off Antarctica thats home to millions of penguins and seals.The trillion-ton slab of ice called a megaberg could slam into South Georgia Island and get stuck or be guided around it by currents. If it gets stuck it could make it hard for penguin parents to feed their babies and some young could even starve. Overall, however, researchers arent too worried about major harm from the iceberg, named A23a.Whats happening is more spectacular than dangerous, scientists said.Its also a natural process happening more frequently because of human-causedclimate change, said British Antarctic Survey physical oceanographer Andrew Meijers, who examined the iceberg up close in December 2023 when it drifted past the research shipRRS Sir David Attenborough.The iceberg itself is colossal and it stretches from horizon to horizon, Meijers said Thursday of the 130-foot (40-meter) tall mass. Its a huge wall, a Game of Thrones style wall of ice that towers above the ship. With some waves breaking against it and if you get a bit of sunshine coming through, its really dramatic.For every bit of the iceberg above the waters surface, theres ten times more below, Meijers said.Its not exactly high-speed action. The iceberg is making its way at a glacial pace of one meter every three to seven seconds, much slower than one mile per hour, Meijers said.In the next two to four weeks the iceberg will approach South Georgia where the water gets shallow, so it could wedge itself in, Meijers said. Or it could slide past.Large icebergs bump into the shoals around South Georgia more or less every year its a kind of highway for the major icebergs, University of Colorado ice scientist Ted Scambos wrote in an email. This ocean current path has been known since Shackletons time, he said, referring to Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton who led British expeditions to the southern continent. Shackleton made the trip to the island in just three weeks. Usually the icebergs take a bit longer (he had sails), he said.Eventually, this big iceberg will break up into smaller ones and melt as icebergs do, Meijers said.At full size, it doesnt represent much of a hazard for fishermen in the area, because they can see it. The bigger concern is penguins which are in their summer breeding cycle, Meijers said.South Georgia is an amazingly ecologically rich island. Its a breeding ground for a huge number of penguins, millions of penguins and seals, Meijers said. Theres lots of pups and chicks and theyre all still dependent on their parents.The parents go out quite a way into the water and forage. Icebergs can block pathways to their food, making the adults swim farther, burning more energy, bringing back less to the babies. That unfortunately can dramatically increase mortality rates. And it has happened in the past, Meijers said.Thats bad for that colony, but it doesnt amount to a problem for overall penguin populations, Scambos said.The whole ecosystem in the Southern Ocean is very resilient to these events, he wrote. It has evolved with these icebergs being a factor for hundreds of thousands of years.This iceberg first broke off in 1986 but has been penned in a crowded patch of sea ice for decades until a few years ago, Meijers said.Calving icebergs are normal, but they are happening more frequently as the climate warms and more fresh water flows into the ocean, Meijers said.Seth Borenstein, AP science writer
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