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This is a quality image and is considered to meet the quality image guidelines. This image has been assessed under the valued image criteria and is considered the most valued image on Commons within the scope Icebergs in the Atlantic Ocean with its underside exposed .
Natural-colour satellite image of the ice island that calved off the glacier on August 5, 2010. B-44 256 2017 Radar imagery captured by the European Space Agency's Sentinel-1 on September 23, 2017, showed an early view of the new iceberg. [20] [21] B-17B: 140 1999 NOAA satellite image of Iceberg B-17B, December 11, 2009.
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We’re ready for a whole new set of explorations in 2025 with picks for 25 top places to visit. Take cues from the worst-behaved travelers of 2024 for what not to do in the year ahead.
A23a is a large tabular iceberg which calved from the Filchner–Ronne Ice Shelf in 1986. It was stuck on the sea bed for many years but then started moving in 2020. As of February 2024, its area is about 3,900 square kilometres (1,500 sq mi), which makes it the current largest iceberg in the world. [2] [3]
Image credits: Green____cat Cyber and media psychologist Mayra Ruiz-McPherson , PhD(c), MA, MFA, explains that broadly speaking, "negative news" can describe two kinds of events and happenings.
Iceberg A-68 on 20 July 2017 The drift of Iceberg A-68A from 1 May 2018 to 26 August 2018. Iceberg A-68 was a giant tabular iceberg adrift in the South Atlantic, having calved from Antarctica's Larsen C ice shelf in July 2017. [1] [2] [3] By 16 April 2021, no significant fragments remained. [4]