1,000,000,000,000 tons. That’s one trillion, with a “t” at the start. And that’s how much A23a, aka the world’s largest iceberg, weighs. It spans across about 1,418-sqaure-miles, or about three times ...
An iceberg three times the size of Los Angeles has broken off from Antarctica. The European Space Agency reported that the iceberg is a 1,667 square-mile block of ice and is now floating in the ...
A new satellite image released by NASA has captured the “ongoing disintegration” of Iceberg A-23a in Antarctica, which was the world’s largest iceberg before it was reported to be shrinking rapidly ...
An iceberg, known as A23a, top, seen on a NASA satellite, is visible near South Georgia Island, bottom, on Sept. 1, 2025, off the coast of Antarctica. (NASA Worldview via AP) The world's largest and ...
It's been a long and unusual journey for the world's largest iceberg, known as A23a, but it's ending in a relatively usual way: breaking apart and melting in the warmer waters of the South Atlantic ...
Icebergs can get really, really big. In 2019, an iceberg twice the size of New York City started to break free from Antarctica, but shockingly, this wasn't even close to the largest iceberg in the ...
The world’s largest and most enduring iceberg is splintering into smaller pieces, to the point that it’s no longer the biggest chunk of ice floating in the oceans. The shrinking megaberg, known as ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results