Iceberg
Eight Times The Size Of Manhattan Adrift
The
giant ice island - measuring 278 square miles - is floating off the
Antarctic coast and could pose a threat to shipping.
13
November, 2013
An
iceberg eight times the size of Manhattan has broken off a glacier in
the Antarctica and could threaten busy international shipping lanes.
Scientists
in Britain have been awarded a £50,000 grant to track the giant ice
island, which came away from the Pine Island Glacier in July.
The
team, led by Professor Grant Bigg from the University of Sheffield,
is monitoring the iceberg's movement and rate of melting.
Professor
Bigg said: "Its current movement does not raise environmental
issues, However, a previous giant iceberg from this location
eventually entered the South Atlantic and if this happens it could
potentially pose a hazard to ships.
"If
the iceberg stays around the Antarctic coast, it will melt slowly and
will eventually add a lot of freshwater that stays in the coastal
current, altering the density and affecting the speed of the current.
"Similarly,
if it moves north it will melt faster but could alter the overturning
rates of the current as it may create a cap of freshwater above the
denser seawater."
He
added: "if these events become more common, there will be a
build-up of freshwater which could have lasting effects."
The
six-month project, funded by the National Environmental Research
Council (NERC), is being co-managed by Dr Robert Marsh, from the
University of Southampton.
He
said: "The primary reason to monitor the iceberg is that it's
very large. An iceberg that size could survive for a year or longer
and it could drift a long way north in that time and end up in the
vicinity of world shipping lanes in the Southern Ocean.
"There's
a lot of activity to and from the Antarctic Peninsula, and ships
could potentially cross paths with this large iceberg, although it
would be an unusual coincidence."
The
team's work is not only expected to provide a timely warning of any
consequences of the iceberg's release to the shipping industry, but
will include testing a technique which could in future be used by ice
hazard warning services.
The
iceberg was first spotted by scientists from the Alfred Wegener
Institute for Polar and Marine Research via the German Space
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