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A science museum in Georgia is studying a piece of a meteor that blazed over the Southeast last week and was later recovered ...
A fresh set of numbers is changing what scientists thought happens when a city‑sized slab of ice dissolves into the sea. The ...
Residents across the CSRA, and even as far as Columbia, have reported seeing a fireball streak across the sky, Thursday.
Despite being armed with numerous life rafts and buoyancy aids, the fisherman decided to keep his distance. Mr Antoniussen was out hoping to catch some fish, yet instead found something far more ...
Flying over the massive iceberg, it's indistinguishable from the horizon. But as it melts, chunks of ice risk floating towards South Georgia, presenting a problem for some of its penguins, seals ...
Earth's largest iceberg has run aground off the coast of South Georgia Island, a common rendezvous spot for large icebergs, new satellite images show. Measuring 1,240 square miles (3,460 square ...
The colossal iceberg A23a, seen here in 2023, appears to have run aground on the continental shelf surrounding South Georgia, a remote British territory home to an abundance of wildlife. (T.
The world’s largest and oldest iceberg has run aground near the island of South Georgia, scientists say. The nearly one-trillion-tonne block of ice, known as A23a, has come to rest on the continental ...
A23a started to drift up through the Southern Ocean in 2020, when currents put it on a possible collision course with South Georgia. The iceberg and the island are about the same size in square miles.
The so-called A23a iceberg, the world's largest, has run aground in South Georgia after almost 40 years at sea, threatening important penguin colonies.
A23a, as the iceberg is known, appears to have come to a standstill near the sub-Antarctic Island of South Georgia, around 90 kilometers (56 miles) from land. It weighs nearly a trillion tonnes ...
“If the iceberg stays grounded, we don’t expect it to significantly affect the local wildlife of South Georgia,” said Andrew Meijers, an oceanographer at the BAS, in the statement.