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Icebergs traced to giant berg south of Falklands

Tuesday, November 7th 2006 - 20:00 UTC
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Scientists from New Zealand's National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research Niwa believe they have traced the history of a flotilla of icebergs discovered drifting about 260km south of this insular country.

Oceanographer Mike Williams said the 100-odd icebergs were likely descendants of A-43, a super iceberg that broke off the Ronne Ice Shelf, south of the Falkland Islands, in May 2000.

A-43 was then 167 kilometres long and 32 kilometres wide but it didn't last that long and begun splitting apart as it drifted into the Scotia Sea, in the southern Atlantic.

By January 2005, it measured about 51km by 21km and had a new name, A-43A.

Niwa believes A-43A then drifted east, about 13,500km on a circum-polar current around Antarctica, eventually washing up between the Auckland Islands and Stewart Island.

"Based on A-43A's last recorded position, and assuming it travelled the shortest possible route around Antarctica, we calculate an average speed of 0.9km/h or about 21.5 kilometres a day," Dr Williams said. "Somewhere along the way, A-43A has broken into smaller pieces."

The icy armada is now believed to be heading northward, caught by the Southland Current, which runs up the east of the South Island of New Zealand to about Mid-Canterbury before flowing out towards the Chatham Islands.

The largest iceberg is estimated to be about 2km long by 1.5km wide, and by Dr Williams' reckoning contains enough fresh water to fill 1 million Olympic-size pools.

The iceberg rises about 100m above the ocean, but Dr Williams said about 90% of an iceberg's mass was below the waterline.

Despite its size, the monster iceberg is probably riddled with holes and "catastrophic failure" could see it "just fall to pieces" relatively quickly, Dr Williams said. The flotilla would probably drift about 300km up the east coast of New Zealand's South Island before veering back out to sea.

The icebergs were first sighted by the crew of a NZ Air Force Orion on a routine patrol last Friday.

Categories: Mercosur.

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