What will be the extent of iceberg A23a's impact on South Georgia's ecosystem by April 30, 2025?
Major impact • 25%
Moderate impact • 25%
Minor impact • 25%
No discernible impact • 25%
Scientific studies and environmental reports
40-Meter-Tall, 1 Trillion Tonne Iceberg A23a Threatens Penguins and Seals on South Georgia
Jan 23, 2025, 07:30 PM
The world's largest iceberg, known as A23a, is drifting towards South Georgia, a remote British island in the South Atlantic Ocean. This colossal iceberg, which spans 3,500 square kilometers, is 40 meters tall and weighs nearly one trillion tonnes, poses a potential threat to the island's wildlife, particularly to the millions of penguins and seals that inhabit the area. A23a, which broke off from Antarctica's Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf in 1986, has been on the move since becoming dislodged from the sea floor in December 2024. Moving at a glacial pace of one meter every three to seven seconds, the iceberg is expected to approach South Georgia in the next two to four weeks. Its approach could block access to feeding grounds for the island's wildlife, potentially leading to increased mortality rates among young penguins and seals during their summer breeding cycle. While researchers are not overly concerned about major harm, they note that the event is part of a natural process that is occurring more frequently due to human-caused climate change.
View original story
No significant impact • 25%
Increased penguin mortality • 25%
Increased seal mortality • 25%
Disruption to feeding grounds • 25%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Other • 25%
No significant disruption • 25%
Rerouting of shipping lanes • 25%
Increased shipping delays • 25%
Collision with South Georgia • 25%
Significant wildlife disruption • 25%
Iceberg melts significantly • 25%
No significant impact • 25%
Collided with South Georgia • 25%
Melted completely • 25%
Still drifting north • 25%
Grounded or stationary • 25%
Neither significantly • 25%
Seals • 25%
Both equally • 25%
Penguins • 25%
Drifts further into Atlantic • 25%
Breaks into smaller pieces • 25%
Melts completely • 25%
Grounds on continental shelf • 25%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Diverts away from South Georgia • 25%
Reaches South Georgia and causes significant wildlife impact • 25%
Reaches South Georgia with minimal wildlife impact • 25%
Breaks apart before reaching South Georgia • 25%