Houston Chronicle

Rare iceberg comes with corners

Rectangula­r slab is the size of a college campus

- By Deanna Paul

A college-campus-size iceberg spotted on the Antarctic Peninsula margins is upending public expectatio­ns of classic Titanic-esque icebergs with sharp spires jutting from the ocean surface.

An aerial photo shared by NASA captured a rectangula­r slab of ice sliced so smoothly that it appears unnatural. Experts say they believe the iceberg fractured in May from Larsen C, a large ice shelf fed by several glaciers on the east side of the peninsula. They’re still unsure whether it will cause the rest of the shelf to destabiliz­e.

“Ice shelves release large icebergs from time to time. They do this naturally,” said Christophe­r Shuman, a research scientist at the University of Maryland Baltimore County’s Joint Center for Earth Systems Technology at NASA. It means that the ice shelf is changing, which is not surprising given the changes scientists have seen nearby, he said.

Larsen A, an ice shelf farther north on the peninsula, broke up in 1995. Larsen B broke up in 2002. Larsen C itself calved an even larger iceberg in 1986, Shuman said. It was recorded at 2,780 square miles — larger than Maryland — until last July, when it calved an iceberg the size of Delaware, known as A-68.

The rectangula­r iceberg, photograph­ed as part of a topographi­c mapping project tracking changes in polar ice shelves called Operation Ice Bridge, fractured in May after A-68 crashed into Bawden, a rocky ice-covered island in the northwest, and created several small berg fragments. “This is not good news for the Larsen C in a general sense,” Shuman said. But the iceberg could continue to be resupplied with ice from land-based glaciers, as it was after the bigger iceberg broke up in 1986.

A larger problem, Shuman said, is that the ice front is as far west as it’s ever been, based on satellite imagery. “The fact that the edge is so far west is not a good sign; Larsen A and Larsen B broke up just up the peninsula,” he said.

National Snow and Ice Data Center research scientist Twila Moon said it’s unsurprisi­ng that the iceberg fractured in straight lines. That’s consistent with an iceberg calved from floating ice in that region, she said. Ice is a mineral; it has a crystal-like structure and breaks the way a shard of glass would.

“When a piece of glacial ice is in contact with the ocean floor, the interferen­ce at the base causes it to calve off differentl­y, creating misshaped icebergs,” Moon explained. When an iceberg breaks off from a shelf of floating ice like Larsen C, there’s no friction controllin­g how it breaks up.”

Shuman said the shape is not surprising, though it’s unusual to see such sharp angles.

“It’s all about the force of the iceberg striking the ice rise. When ice is fracturing, it tends to break on the line of force,” he said. Moreover, there are other pieces nearby that are relatively rectangula­r.

 ?? NASA via AFP / Getty Images ?? This NASA image from an Operation IceBridge flight over Antarctica shows a tabular iceberg floating among sea ice just off of the Larsen C ice shelf.
NASA via AFP / Getty Images This NASA image from an Operation IceBridge flight over Antarctica shows a tabular iceberg floating among sea ice just off of the Larsen C ice shelf.

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