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Iceberg A-68A: hit or miss by Staff Writers Paris (ESA) Nov 27, 2020
An enormous iceberg, called A-68A, has made Iceberg A-68A: hit or miss?s over the past weeks as it drifts towards South Georgia in the Southern Ocean. New images, captured by the Copernicus Sentinel-1 mission, show the berg is rotating and potentially drifting westwards. In July 2017, the lump of ice, more than twice the size of Luxembourg, broke off Antarctica's Larsen C ice shelf - spawning one of the largest icebergs on record. Now, three years later, the A68A berg is being carried by currents in open waters - thousands of kilometres from its birthplace. The Copernicus Sentinel-1 mission's latest acquisition, captured on 25 November, shows the berg's eastern tip is now just 255 km from South Georgia. If the iceberg were to reach the island's shores, it could potentially ground in the shallow waters offshore and threaten wildlife, including penguins, seals and krill. As these animals need access to the sea to feed, the iceberg could easily block their foraging routes - preventing them from feeding their young. It could also disturb the ecosystem below by crushing animal and plant life on the seafloor. Satellite missions are being used to track the berg on its journey over the past three years. The Sentinel-1 radar mission, with its ability to see through clouds and the dark, has been instrumental in mapping the polar regions in winter.
Climate change thinning glaciers, increasing oxygen levels at Mount Everest Washington DC (UPI) Nov 20, 2020 Mount Everest's glaciers are thinning, its peaks are accumulating microplastics and the air surrounding the mountain hosts more oxygen than it used to have. Those are just a few of the findings from a suite of new studies - each detailing various effects of climate change and human activity on Mount Everest - published Friday in the journal One Earth. Over the last few decades, human traffic on Mount Everest has steadily increased. More and more people are visiting the mountain' ... read more
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