The World’s largest iceberg ever
recorded, that broke away from Antarctica's Ross Ice Shelf 18 years ago, nearing
the end of its voyage, according to NASA.
When iceberg B-15 first broke away
in March 2000, it measured about 296 kilometres long and 37 kilometres wide.
B-15 has since fractured into numerous smaller bergs, and most have melted
away.
Just 4 pieces remain that meet the
minimum size requirement —at least 37 kilometres to be tracked by the US
National Ice Center.
When astronauts aboard International
Space Station (ISS) shot a photograph of the iceberg on May 22 this year, B-15Z
measured about 18 kilometres long and 9 kilometres wide.
A large fracture is visible along
the centre of the berg, and smaller pieces are splintering off from the edges.
That is still within the trackable
size, NASA said in a statement. However, the iceberg may not be tracked much
longer if it splinters into smaller pieces.
Melting and breakup would not be
surprising, given the berg's long journey and northerly location. A previous
image showed B-15Z farther south in October 2017, after it had ridden the
coastal countercurrent about three-quarters of the way around Antarctica
bringing it to the Southern Ocean off the tip of the Antarctic Peninsula.
Currents prevented the berg from
continuing through the Drake Passage; instead, B-15Z cruised north into the
southern Atlantic Ocean.
When the May 2018 photograph was
acquired, the berg was about 277 kilometres northwest of the South Georgia
islands. Icebergs that make it this far has been known to rapidly melt and end
their life cycles here.
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