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An instrument aboard NASA 's Aqua satellite captured this image on July 12, 2017, revealing the giant iceberg that just calved from Antarctica's Larsen C ice shelf.
In December, Digital Journal reported on the progression of the ever-growing crack on the Larsen C ice shelf. On November 10, satellite images showed the crack was getting wider, longer and much ...
A growing crack in a portion of the ice shelf called Larsen C is poised to free an iceberg the size of Delaware from the continent. This Landsat satellite image, acquired in January 2016, shows ...
In July, one of the largest icebergs ever recorded — measuring in at about the size of Delaware and containing a volume of ice twice the size of Lake Erie — broke off the Larsen C Ice Shelf in ...
Space agency NASA has published a series of stunning images showing an Antarctic iceberg the size of Delaware, giving a close-up glimpse of a vast body of ice previously shown only in satellite ...
Another major crack has appeared on the Larsen C ice shelf in Antarctica, satellite images have revealed.
A satellite has observed a rapid retreat of one of Antarctica’s ice shelves, now half the size it was 10 years ago, the European Space Agency said Thursday.
Satellite images from Wednesday, July 12, show that a slice of the Larsen C ice shelf covering about 1930 square miles has calved, or detached from the peninsula, over the past week (see Figure 1).
This satellite image from July 21 shows the fresh iceberg broken away from the Larsen C ice shelf. NASA Goddard/UMBC JCET, Christopher A. Shuman This article was originally published on CNET.
A new satellite image tracks the retreat of Antarctica's Larsen Ice Shelf, parts of which could disappear by 2020.
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