Science Source Feb 2010
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In late February 2008, the Wilkens ice shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula disintegrated into a floating pile of massive ice bergs, smaller ice fragments, and slush that was trapped in place by freezing sea water over subsequent weeks. The dramatic event was first spotted in NASA satellite imagery by Ted Scambos, lead scientist at the National Snow and Ice Data Center. Over the following days, international collaborators used images from satellites and aircraft to track the event.This highly detailed image from the Taiwanese Formosat-2 satellite shows the different sizes, shapes, and textures of the ice fragments on March 8, 2008. Several large icebergs float amid a mosaic of smaller pieces of ice. The level of detail in the image is so great that it can seem as though you are standing over a scale model made out of papier-mache and foam blocks. The detail can make the bergs seem deceptively small. In reality, some of the large bergs are several hundred meters (yards) long.Many of the large, table-like bergs have smooth, bright surfaces. These pieces simply broke off from the ice shelf and floated away. Their broad, flat shapes made them stable in the water, and the rise and fall of the ocean swells did not topple them. Other large pieces, however, tipped over like dominoes, making
Science Source Feb 2010
2010-02-13
EAST NEWS
Science Source
NASA/Science Source
bj9380
0,45MB
12cm x 7cm by 300dpi
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