All posts tagged: icebergs

The number of icebergs in the Arctic is surging and transforming life on the ocean floor

The number of icebergs in the Arctic is surging and transforming life on the ocean floor

Far below the Arctic’s drifting ice, the seafloor has begun to change in a way few people ever see. Stones are falling out of melting icebergs, landing on soft deep-sea mud, and creating new places for life to take hold. That shift starts much farther north, where large glaciers in northeast Greenland and parts of the Russian Arctic are breaking apart more often than they once did. As those glaciers calve, they do not release clean ice alone. They also send out icebergs packed with rock fragments and sediment scraped up during years of travel. In the Fram Strait, between Greenland and Svalbard, scientists began noticing just how much debris some of those icebergs were carrying. During a 2021 expedition aboard the research icebreaker Polarstern, biologist Melanie Bergmann of the Alfred Wegener Institute spotted something striking from a helicopter. “Some of the icebergs were carrying unusually large amounts of debris and looked almost black from above.” Iceberg photo. (CREDIT: Alfred Wegener Institute / Christian R. Rohleder) The sight stood out even to seasoned Arctic researchers. …

2025’s best photos of the natural world, from volcanoes to icebergs

2025’s best photos of the natural world, from volcanoes to icebergs

Mount Etna erupting European Union, Copernicus Sentinel-2 imagery Mount Etna in Sicily is the world’s most active stratovolcano, which is a high, conical volcano created by repeated eruptions of viscous lava. In February, it erupted with ash clouds and a lava flow that travelled 3 kilometres, forcing a local airport to partially close. One of the European Space Agency’s Copernicus Sentinel-2 satellites captured this image of the lava flow on 12 February. An iceberg in Innaarsuit, Greenland Dennis Lehtonen / SWNS A giant iceberg drifted into the harbour in Innaarsuit in western Greenland in July, looming over the village of 180 for more than a week. Authorities warned people to stay away in case it collapsed and crushed something or generated a destructive wave. This is the second time in less than a decade that a massive iceberg has threatened the town. As Greenland melts, more icebergs are calving off its glaciers. Hurricane Melissa destroyed buildings in Jamaica RICARDO MAKYN/AFP via Getty Images Hurricane Melissa tied with the 1935 Labor Day Hurricane as the strongest …