Icebergs aren't just melting — they're flipping, reshaping, and breaking apart in ways that could have major consequences for our oceans and communities. According to Phys.org, a new study from New ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. For Arctic residents and a few polar addicts, icebergs are familiar. I've skied, paddled, and boated past thousands of them. But ...
On a special episode (first released on February 12, 2025) of The Excerpt podcast: Icebergs are bellwethers of environmental changes. Their formation, movement and melting offer insights into some of ...
Comparison of the modern and historical datasets: BYU/NIC in red, AWI in orange, Halley, Bouvet and Riou observations in black and Cook's cruise tracks and data points in blue. A new study comparing ...
Late in the evening of April 14 1912, the RMS Titanic collided with an iceberg in the north-west Atlantic. In just over two and a half hours, the Titanic sank, claiming the lives of 1,514 people. The ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Amanda Kooser covers the quirky side of science and space. Images from 2023 from the Copernicus Sentinel-1 mission show how A23a ...
When I think about the Arctic, I picture frigid waters filled with narwhals, polar bears and icebergs. I asked my friend Von Walden how those icebergs got there. He’s a polar scientist at Washington ...
The British Antarctic Survey (BAS) has warned that two massive icebergs could pose a threat to maritime shipping and the environment. One of these icebergs, which calved from the Brunt Ice Shelf in ...
A new study reveals there was a time when massive icebergs, like the ones we see in Antarctica today, were drifting less than 90 miles off the U.K. coastline. Scientists have for the first time ...
Icebergs are often found in the world’s most remote, coldest and dangerous seas. But each spring, a unique geological phenomenon brings hundreds of Icebergs into the communities along Newfoundland’s ...
Contrary to opinions held by some researchers, a new analysis of more than 20 years of historical data has found no evidence that the increasing number of large icebergs off Antarctica’s coasts is a ...
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