‘Gigantic’ iceberg breaks away from ice shelf in Antarctica

 

Chaffin Mitchell

AccuWeather

A colossal iceberg roughly the size of Los Angeles or Sydney, Australia, and weighing an estimated 347 billion tons broke off from the Amery Ice Shelf in Antarctica last week.

The 630-square-mile iceberg, named D28, separated from the ice shelf on September 26, next to a location scientists had been watching for nearly 20 years. The area was known as the “Loose Tooth,” because it appeared to be barely hanging on to the ice shelf in recent years.

“We first noticed a rift at the front of the ice shelf in the early 2000s and predicted a large iceberg would break off between 2010-2015,” said Helen Amanda Fricker, one of the lead researchers on the team studying D28, said in a statement from the Australian government’s Antarctic division.

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