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Iceberg twice the size of Greater London runs aground off Antarctica

A23a, the world’s biggest and oldest iceberg, is stuck near the island of South Georgia

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An aerial view of the A23a iceberg in the waters of the Southern Ocean off Antarctica on January 14. Photo: EYOS Expeditions/AFP

The world’s biggest iceberg appears to have run aground roughly 70km (43 miles) from a remote Antarctic island, potentially sparing the crucial wildlife haven from being hit, a research organisation said on Tuesday.

The colossal iceberg A23a – which is more than twice the size of Greater London and weighs nearly one trillion tonnes – has been drifting north from Antarctica towards South Georgia island since 2020.

This had raised fears it could collide with the island or run aground in shallower water near it, potentially disrupting the ability of penguins and seals to feed their young.

However, the gigantic wall of ice has been stuck 73km (45 miles) from the island since March 1, according to a statement from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS).

“If the iceberg stays grounded, we don’t expect it to significantly affect the local wildlife,” BAS oceanographer Andrew Meijers said.

“In the last few decades, the many icebergs that end up taking this route through the Southern Ocean soon break up, disperse and melt,” added Meijers, who encountered A23a in late 2023 and has tracked its fate via satellite ever since.

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