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After breaking free, why the world’s largest iceberg is stuck spinning in circles

Imagine a piece of ice about 1,500 square miles in area and as deep as the Empire State Building, spinning slowly but steadily enough to fully rotate it on its head over the course of about 24 days. That's what is happening to the A23a.

A photo provided by Derren Fox, British Antarctic Survey, shows the world’s largest iceberg, named A23a, near Antarctica in April 2024. Round and round a 1,600-square-mile iceberg goes, stuck in a vortex over an underwater mountain. When it will stop, nobody knows.A photo provided by Derren Fox, British Antarctic Survey, shows the world’s largest iceberg, named A23a, near Antarctica in April 2024. Round and round a 1,600-square-mile iceberg goes, stuck in a vortex over an underwater mountain. When it will stop, nobody knows. (Derren Fox, British Antarctic Survey via The New York Times)

Written by Remi Tumin

For more than 30 years, the world’s largest iceberg was stuck in the Antarctic. Five times the size of New York City’s land area and more than 1,000 feet deep, the mammoth piece of ice finally became loose in 2020 and began a slow drift toward the Southern Ocean.

Now, A23a, as it’s known, is spinning in place.

After leaving Antarctic waters, the iceberg got stuck in a vortex over a seamount, or an underwater mountain. Imagine a piece of ice about 1,500 square miles in area and as deep as the Empire State Building spinning slowly but steadily enough to fully rotate it on its head over the course of about 24 days.

A photo provided by Chris Walton, British Antarctic Survey, shows the world’s largest iceberg, named A23a, near Antarctica in April 2024. It’s unclear how long A23a will spin in place. (Chris Walton, British Antarctic Survey via The New York Times)

Where is the A23 iceberg?

The iceberg is spinning near the South Orkney Islands, about 375 miles northeast of the Antarctic Peninsula, “maintaining a chill 15 degree rotation per day,” the British Antarctic Survey, the United Kingdom’s polar research institute, said on social media.

“It’s basically just sitting there, spinning around, and it will very slowly melt as long as it stays there,” said Alex Brearley, a physical oceanographer and head of the Open Oceans research group at the British Antarctic Survey. “What we don’t know is how quickly it will actually come out of this.”

What exactly is the A23?

A23a has been embroiled in drama since the start, a trait it picked up from its parent-berg.

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A23, which was even bigger than A23a, was one of three icebergs that broke off, or calved, from the Filchner Ice Shelf in 1986. At the time of the calving, A23 was home to a Soviet Union research center and researchers eventually had to abandon the base. A23a broke off later that year and hit bottom in the Weddell Sea, where it would remain for 34 more years.

In 2020, A23a finally freed itself, and in December, it began to move out of Antarctic waters on a long meander through the Southern Ocean. It took Brearley and a research vessel almost an entire day to circle it during a visit in December. They were awestruck.

“It looks like land, that’s the only way to describe it,” Brearley said. But by spring, A23a caught the spins. Using satellite imagery, the British Antarctic Survey first observed the iceberg spinning in April.

Large Antarctic icebergs are designated by A, B, C and D depending on where in Antarctica they originate, and they receive a number only once they’ve reached a big enough size. Their sequential order shows how long A23a has topped the list of world’s biggest icebergs: A76 calved in 2021, for instance, but melted two years later.

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So why did the A23 begin ‘spinning’?

The iceberg is in an area of the Southern Ocean known as Iceberg Alley, a popular spot for icebergs. Typically, large icebergs move through quickly and get sucked into the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, the largest ocean current in the world. The blocks of ice eventually get shot out eastward to warmer waters, where they begin to melt and disintegrate. Brearley described the transition as “a warm bath of water” only a couple of degrees above freezing.

Not A23a. Instead, the gigantic iceberg got caught in what’s known as a Taylor column, a current that forms around seamounts. Standard flow diverges around the underwater mountain and creates a stagnant cylinder of fluids above the seamount, slowly rotating the water counterclockwise around the bump.

The bump A23a is swimming over is about 100 kilometers across (about 62 miles) and rises up from the deep sea floor to a height of about 1,000 meters (3,280 feet), Brearley said, calling it “a pretty cool geophysical phenomenon.”

How frequently these Taylor columns form or how often icebergs get stuck in them is not known, Brearley said, and there is not enough satellite data or underwater mapping to fully understand the phenomenon’s frequency. It’s also unclear how long the iceberg will stay in place. But one thing is clear: The largest iceberg in the world will not melt and flood the southern hemisphere.

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Melting icebergs that originate from floating ice shelves like A23a do not themselves significantly contribute to global sea level rise, said Brearley, because the ice is already floating in the ocean. Climate scientists are concerned that the deterioration of large portions of ice shelves will make the continent’s glaciers more vulnerable to warming.

Brearley pointed to a 2015 study that observed a robotic float, part of a fleet of instruments that drift in ocean currents to measure water temperature, trapped in a Taylor column for four years just to the northeast of A23a’s current location.

If A23a spends an extended time in the vortex, the iceberg could melt significantly and affect plankton and other organisms in the marine food chain in the area, Brearley said.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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