Nov. 24 (UPI) --A gargantuan Antarctic iceberg five times the size of New York City and as thick as the Empire State Building is drifting away from the continental ice shelf toward the South ...
A massive iceberg, five times bigger than New York City, is on the move and about to leave the Antarctic Peninsula—bound for ...
Over a thousand miles from its birthplace and around a fortnight after its collision with Titanic, the last piece of the iceberg disappeared into the Atlantic ocean.
The agency shared the image on X on Friday. Iceberg A23a will likely end up in the South Atlantic Ocean, said ESA. That would put it in a region known as “Iceberg Alley.” Many icebergs from ...
the Weddell Sea is that sector of Antarctica directly to the south of the Atlantic Ocean. The Brunt is on the eastern side of the sea. Like all ice shelves, it will periodically calve icebergs.
The monster iceberg A68 was dumping more than ... through the Southern Ocean and up into the South Atlantic. This has enabled the group to assess varying melt rates during the course of the ...
Richard William Smith sent the postcard while the Titanic was in Cork, Ireland. The liner sank three days later.
Titanic's wreckage was first explored in 1987, a beginning point that would escalate the following decades and include ...
The beach is a stone's throw away from Iceland's Jökulsárlón glacier lagoon, a clear lake that ferries giant icebergs to the Atlantic Ocean. The icebergs originate from the Breiðamerkurjökull ...
A new Boston exhibition welcomes guests to travel back in time with genuine artifacts from the Titanic's ill-fated maiden ...
A photo of the earth and its oceans taken from space. The photo has been changed so we can see all of the earth’s surface in one picture. The Pacific Ocean is the world’s largest ocean.