【】
Flying 1,500 feet above the Antarctic coast, NASA scientists recently passed over a bizarrely straight-edged rectangular iceberg and snapped a picture of the floating slab.
While an intriguing image for the many of us who don't take aerial surveys of the changing, cracking, and melting Antarctic coast, these "tabular" icebergs are a common sight for scientists working in Antarctica.
"It's not uncommon to see that in Antarctica -- although that [the tabular iceberg spotted by NASA] is a fresh and sharp looking one," Ted Scambos, a senior research scientist at the National Snow and Ice Data Center, said in an interview.
Tweet may have been deleted
"The ice shelves that produce the icebergs are extremely flat and expansive, so we often see nearby tabular icebergs similar to the one seen in the photo," Brooke Medley, NASA's Operation IceBridge deputy project scientist, added over email.
For years, Antarctic scientists have documented the curiously straight-edged icebergs floating in the water after snapping off from ice shelves -- the ends of massive glaciers that float over the ocean.
In 2008 the British Antarctic Survey flew over a whole collection of these freakishly perfect tabular icebergs, which had broken off of the Wilkins Ice Shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula.
The strange icebergs really become visible at about 8 seconds in:
"It's just amazing," said Scambos of the Wilkins tabular icebergs. "There are hundreds of them."
"There's a whole field of these impossibly square blocks," he added.
Whether it's the recent tabular iceberg captured by NASA off the Larson C Ice Shelf, or the Wilkins blocks above, the method of their creation is the same.
SEE ALSO:This scientist keeps winning money from people who bet against climate changeThe expansive ice shelves that create the icebergs are hanging off of Antarctic land, somewhat similar to the flimsy tape extended out from a tape measure.
"After a while, a tape measure will bend from its own weight," Catherine Walker, a NASA scientist who researches Antarctic glaciers, said in an interview.
Satellite images showing the 2008 Wilkin's Ice Shelf collapse.Credit: Formosat/Dr. Cheng-Chien Liu, National Cheng-Kung University and Dr. An-Ming Wu, National Space Organization, Taiwan/Nasa"Usually, you get a certain point in which you pass its [the iceberg's] ability to hold itself up," said Walker. "Then you get a straight line where it calves."
Generally, ice shelves are very uniform substances, added Scambos. "In general, if you just have a long, flat plate you can have long, straight cracks."
This iceberg captured by NASA -- akin to the Wilkins icebergs -- was also pretty new and fresh, which certainly helped its profoundly sharp, almost unnatural appearance.
A semi-circle shaped iceberg with vertical sides, from the Venable Ice Shelf.Credit: nasa"That shape is not hugely surprising," said Walker. "It's relatively new and not rounded off by melting or anything like that -- a new piece of broken glass is sharp."
A month from now, however, waves and melting will likely eat away at the iceberg's sharp, right-angled form. But for now, it's in near-perfect shape -- even if we can't quite see the entire slab.
"The scale of icebergs is often hard to convey," said Medley. "While I wasn't on this flight, it's important to remember that several of these icebergs cannot fit in the full camera frame due to their immensity."
Featured Video For You
Ever wonder how the universe might end?
相关文章
One of the most controversial power struggles in media comes to a close
One of the world's biggest media companies has been embroiled in a complex personal and professional2025-01-30Prime Day price drop: $300 off Roborock Q5 vacuums
SAVE up to $300: This Prime Day, Roborock vacuums are on sale at Amazon for some seriously competiti2025-01-30Best Garmin deal: Garmin epix smartwatch on sale for $200 off
SAVE $200: As of September 15, the Garmin epix (Gen 2)GPS smartwatch is on sale for $699.99, down fr2025-01-30Apple admits there's an iPhone 15 setup bug. Here's how to fix it.
It's finally here. The new Apple iPhone 15 has officially hit stores. But there's already a big prob2025-01-30Fake news reports from the Newseum are infinitely better than actual news
Actual investigative journalism: who needs it?At least, that's what some people will likely conclude2025-01-30Best headphones deal: Made for Amazon Kids Bluetooth headset on sale for $15.99
SAVE $23: As of September 28, the Made for Amazon Kids Bluetooth headset from the brand ONANOFF is o2025-01-30
最新评论