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#a83 — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #a83, aggregated by home.social.

  1. #A83 reopens via Old Military Road #OMR following 500-tonne #Landslide caught in debris nets, following a safety review by #BEAR #Scotland. #BearNW #Landslip

  2. #A83 #RestAndBeThankful #Landslip #Landslide 8:20am 15/9/24
    From #BearNW
    A brief update to advise that the A83 at the Rest and be Thankful has been closed due to an on-going #DebrisSlide on the hillside.

    Traffic is being diverted onto the A82/A85/A819 whist the situation is on-going.

    Further updates to follow.

  3. On May 20th, 2024, an iceberg measuring 380 square kilometers (~147 mi2) broke off the
    Brunt Ice Shelf in Antarctica.

    This event (A-83) is this region's third significant iceberg calving in the past four years.
    The first came in 2021, when A-74 broke off the ice sheet, while an even larger berg named A-81 followed in 2023.

    The separation of this iceberg was captured by two Earth Observation satellites
    – the ESA's Copernicus Sentinel-1and NASA's Landsat 8 satellites
    – which provided radar imaging and thermal data, respectively.

    The iceberg has been officially designated A-83 by the U.S. National Ice Center, which assigns names based on the Antarctic quadrant where the iceberg was first sighted

    #iceberg #antarctica #a83
    sciencealert.com/gigantic-iceb

  4. "On May 20th, 2024, an #iceberg measuring 380 square kilometers (~147 mi2) broke off the Brunt Ice Shelf in #Antarctica.

    The ongoing loss of Antarctic ice is one of the clearest indications of rising global temperatures and a dire warning."

    sciencealert.com/gigantic-iceb
    #A83

  5. Although the calvings in this area are not thought to be directly linked to climate change, NASA states that "the Brunt Ice Shelf is feeling the same pressures as elsewhere around Antarctica, including low sea ice conditions. When less sea ice is present, ice shelves are more exposed to destabilizing wind and wave action."

    In the waters around Antarctica, ice coverage in Feb. 2024 shrank to near-historic lows for the third year in a row.

    earthobservatory.nasa.gov/imag

    4/n

  6. Names for icebergs larger than 10 nautical miles (on the longest axis) start with the letter A, B, C or D followed by a sequentially assigned number, e.g., A-83.

    The letter is based on the Antarctic quadrant where an iceberg originates, as shown in the graphic below -
    A = 0-90W (Bellingshausen/Weddell Sea)
    B = 90W-180 (Amundsen/Eastern Ross Sea)
    C = 180-90E (Western Ross Sea/Wilkesland)
    D = 90E-0 (Amery/Eastern Weddell Sea)

    polarjournal.ch/en/2021/02/18/

    3/n

  7. The Halley VIa Research Station operated by the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) is located on the Brunt Ice Shelf as shown in the map below. It used to sit on the A-81 iceberg area as seen in the map above and was moved to its current location in 2016 before A-81 broke loose.

    BAS notes that this A-83 calving was expected, the ice shelf is stable and they don’t expect a response to this new event.

    bas.ac.uk/media-post/brunt-ice
    bas.ac.uk/polar-operations/sit

    2/n

  8. An iceberg named A-83, 380 sq km in size, broke off the Brunt Ice Shelf in Antarctica on May 20.

    "This calving event results from a prolonged weakening of the ice at the McDonald Ice Rumples and progressive eastward extension of the so-called ‘Halloween Crack’ into the ice shelf."

    In 2021, the Brunt Ice Shelf produced an iceberg called A-74 followed by an even bigger berg, named A-81, in 2023.

    esa.int/ESA_Multimedia/Images/
    earthobservatory.nasa.gov/imag

    1/n