There is a weird new twist in the strange story of the world’s largest iceberg

Iceberg A23a is stuck… again!
A new twist in a long fable
The iceberg’s end has been postponed
Spinning in a vortex of cool water
How long will it be stuck this time?
“It’s basically just sitting there…”
It could take years to move again
Iceberg A23a is on the move
Not your average Antarctic iceberg
Wandering the ocean
Stuck in the Weddell Sea
A trillion-metric tonne iceberg
Tracking movement from space
The path of iceberg A23a
One reason why A23a broke free
Drifting for years
“The consensus is the time had just come”
Shrinking and moving
One problem A23a poses
Harming local animal life
Icebergs are always doomed to melt
Releasing mineral dust
The decline of the Antarctic ice sheet
West of the South Orkney Islands
A new predicament in a decades-long story
Iceberg A23a is stuck… again!

One of the world’s largest icebergs is destined to melt away into nothing after breaking away from Antarctica. But the story of Iceberg A23a is a long and complicated tale of its slow march toward its demise in warmer waters. 

A new twist in a long fable

The latest update on Iceberg A23a from the British Antarctic Survey has seen a new twist develop in the story of the fabled iceberg. Once destined to slowly melt away in warmer waters, Iceberg A23a appears to have prolonged its end. 

Photo Credit: X @BAS_News

The iceberg’s end has been postponed

On August 4th, the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) reported on its X account that “the A23a mega iceberg is very much still with us and has postponed its expected melty journey north.” What happened? It got stuck… again! 

Photo Credit: X @NASAOcean

Spinning in a vortex of cool water

“This Cornwall-sized piece of ice is now just spinning in an ocean vortex near the South Orkney Islands, maintaining a chill 15° rotation per day,” the BAS report noted, which is interesting since Iceberg A23a spent decades once before. 

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Maps Screenshot of the South Orkney Islands, OpenStreetMaps

How long will it be stuck this time?

How long Iceberg A23a’s current pause will last is unknown according to the Smithsonian Magazine, but scientists think the iceberg could be spinning around for a while—though that doesn’t mean it won’t still slowly melt away. 

“It’s basically just sitting there…”

“It’s basically just sitting there, spinning around, and it will very slowly melt as long as it stays there,” BAS researcher and oceanography Alex Brearley told the New York Times. “What we don’t know is how quickly it will actually come out of this.”

Photo Credit: X @BAS_News

It could take years to move again

University of Boulder Colorado glaciologist Ted Scambos told The Washington Post that A23a could end up floating around in circles for a while. “It could be a couple of years. It might be there for a long time.” But what’s the backstory of this giant iceberg?

Photo Credit: Facebook / Screenshot @BritishAntarcticSurvey

Iceberg A23a is on the move

In 1986, an enormous chunk of ice broke off of the Antarctic coastline and became one of the largest icebergs in the world. However, the giant piece of ice that would become known as Iceberg A23a would stay in place for more than three decades until it started moving again in late 2023.

Not your average Antarctic iceberg

Antarctic iceberg A23a isn’t your typical hunk of frozen water. Measuring in at approximately 1,500 square miles or 4,000 square kilometers, A23a is one of the largest icebergs that exists and is roughly the same size as New York, or Cornwall as the BAS' Alex Brearley pointed out. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons / Public Domain / Course Map by NASA Earth Observatory

Wandering the ocean

However, A23a didn’t just break off and begin wandering the ocean. Reuters noted that the iceberg originally separated from West Antarctica's Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf in 1986 but had been stuck in place until fairly recently. 

Stuck in the Weddell Sea

The base of A23a got stuck on the floor of the Weddell Sea and the iceberg had been in place at that position for decades. But satellite images in 2023 revealed that A23a was on the move towards Antarctica’s northern tip, though the iceberg had been slowly moving since 2020. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Rooiratel - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0

A trillion-metric tonne iceberg

BAS glaciologist Oliver Marsh told Reuters in November 2023 that it was rare to see an iceberg of such size on the move. A23a weighs in at roughly a trillion metric tons and its probable trajectory was being tracked. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Twitter @ojmarsh
Tracking movement from space

On November 24th, the British Antarctic Survey posted a series of images on Twitter from the Copernicus Sentinel-1 showing the path A23a had taken since launching off for the first time in over three decades.  

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Twitter @BAS_News via Copernicus Sentinel-1 imagery, Google Earth Engine
The path of iceberg A23a

The images showed that A23a was moving along the coast of Antarctica and making its way to the northern tip of the continent. Unfortunately, researchers didn't know why the iceberg broke free after so many years. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Twitter @BAS_News via Copernicus Sentinel-1 imagery, Google Earth Engine

One reason why A23a broke free

"Over time it's probably just thinned slightly and got that little bit of extra buoyancy that's allowed it to lift off the ocean floor and get pushed by ocean currents," Marsh explained to Reuters at the time. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Twitter @BAS_News

Drifting for years

Andrew Fleming is a remote sensing expert from the British Antarctic Survey and he told BBC News that A23a had been drifting over the past years, adding that the conclusion of his colleagues was it was probably just time for the iceberg to be free. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Twitter @BAS_News

“The consensus is the time had just come”

“I asked a couple of colleagues about this, wondering if there was any possible change in shelf water temperatures that might have provoked it, but the consensus is the time had just come,” Fleming told the BBC.

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By NASA Goddard Space Flight Center from Greenbelt, MD, USA - Small Tabular Icebergs, CC BY 2.0

Shrinking and moving

"It was grounded since 1986 but eventually it was going to decrease [in size] sufficiently to lose grip and start moving,” Fleming added, and it appears that shrinkage in size has finally come for A23a. 

One problem A23a poses

Fleming explained that British Antarctic Survey researchers first spotted A23a moving in 2020 and said the enormous iceberg could run aground again at South Georgia Island, which would be a major issue for local wildlife. 

Harming local animal life

The Guardian reported that millions of animals like seals, penguins, and seabirds breed on South Georgia Island and forage in the waters surrounding it. If A23a got stuck near the island it could cut off access to those breeding grounds and foraging areas. 

Icebergs are always doomed to melt

“Eventually, all bergs, however big, are doomed to melt and wither away,” explained the BBC’s Jonathan Amos. But that doesn’t have to be a bad thing according to Amos, who wrote that big iceberg melts have a big impact on the ocean’s environment. 

Releasing mineral dust

“As these big bergs melt, they release the mineral dust that was incorporated into their ice when they were part of glaciers scraping along the rock bed,” Amos explained. “This dust is a source of nutrients for the organisms that form the base of ocean food chains.

The decline of the Antarctic ice sheet

Unfortunately, A23a’s adventure around Antarctica does pose risks, but the iceberg may also prove to be a boon for the South Atlantic even if it is a sad reminder that the once-mighty Antarctica ice sheet is in decline due to climate change. 

West of the South Orkney Islands

In January 2024, a ship owned by Eyos Expeditions visited A23a, which was about 200 kilometers or 125 miles to the west of the South Orkney Islands, and found it being battered by waves according to BBC News.

Photo Credit: Screenshot from YouTube @richardsidey

"These were creating cascades of ice"

"We saw waves, a good 3m or 4m high, smashing into the berg," expedition leader Ian Strachan explained to the news agency. "These were creating cascades of ice - a constant state of erosion."

Photo Credit: Screenshot from YouTube @richardsidey

A new predicament in a decades-long story

When A23a will get out of its current predicament and where it will go if it can break free of its position near the South Orkney Islands is still unknown, but its current problems are just another interesting addition to the iceberg's decades-long story.

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