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An Antarctic mega-iceberg is drifting—How ancient ice history sheds light on its journeyThe research demonstrates that icebergs calved from marine-terminating glaciers along the Antarctic coast could have transported debris to the South Orkney Microcontinent during the late Eocene ...
1:00 Footage captures moment 40m tower of ice splits from Antarctic glacier Footage captures moment 40m tower of ice splits from Antarctic glacier Antarctic ice is melting faster than expected ...
He is also A/Prof. at CAOS, Indian Institute of Science. Flowing clockwise around Antarctica, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current is the strongest ocean current on the planet. It’s five times ...
Elbertsen et al, Possible provenance of IRD by tracing late Eocene Antarctic iceberg melting using a high-resolution ocean model, Climate of the Past (2025). DOI: 10.5194/cp-21-441-2025 ...
THE world’s strongest ocean current could slow as melting Antarctic ice sheets flood it with fresh water, according to research published this month that warned of “severe” climate consequences.
Analyses of pollen and spores and the remains of tiny creatures have given a climatic picture of the early Eocene period, about 53 million years ago. The study in Nature suggests Antarctic winter ...
The only way for the Antarctic debris to travel all the way ... Could Antarctica have already had an ice cap in the warm period of the late Eocene? And how could these icebergs survive in the ...
The world's strongest ocean current could slow as melting Antarctic ice sheets flood it with fresh water, according to research published on Monday that warned of "severe" climate consequences.
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