A team of scientists is being sent to the South Atlantic to study the giant iceberg A68a.The 3,900-sq-km behemoth is currently drifting offshore of the British Overseas Territory of South Georgia where it threatens to run aground.If that happens it could make life extremely difficult for the wildlife haven's penguins and seals as they go about foraging for fish and krill.The British Antarctic Survey (BAS) will lead the expedition.The researchers will approach A68a in the Royal Research Ship James Cook.They'll use robotic underwater vehicles and sampling instruments to see how the frozen mass is influencing its environment.Big bergs change the temperature of the sea around them and introduce huge volumes of fresh water as they melt. This affects conditions for all marine life - from the simplest planktonic organisms all the way up to the biggest creatures in the ocean, the whales.IMAGE COPYRIGHTNOCimage captionThe RRS James Cook will deploy the gliders and sample the waters around South GeorgiaA68 broke free from the Larsen C sector of Antarctica in 2017 and has been steadily moving north, away from the White Continent, ever since.Recent months and weeks have seen it lose a lot of its bulk, so much so that it's just surrendered the title of the "world's biggest iceberg".Nonetheless, its scale (roughly now the size of the English county of Suffolk) remains intimidating, especially when seen in satellite images moving only 90km from South Georgia's coast.The researchers hope to be on site at the end of January.They'll deploy two untethered submersible gliders that will spend almost four months in and around A68a."We'll probably put one each end of the berg," said BAS oceanographer Dr Povl Abrahamsen."They'll monitor seawater temperature and salinity, and collect measurements of chlorophyll concentration; and backscatter - essentially how clear the water is or isn't."We'll be deploying the gliders but they'll actually be piloted from the UK, by teams at the National Oceanography Centre and at BAS," he told BBC News.The chlorophyll data will give an indication of how many phytoplankton are in the water. These organisms are right at the base of the food chain. They're eaten by the small crustaceans krill, which in turn are eaten by the territory's key predators."It's quite an efficient system around South Georgia," said BAS ecologist Prof Geraint Tarling."Unlike in more temperate and tropical regions where you have quite an intricate food chain, at South Georgia the phytoplankton go straight into the krill, which go straight into the penguins, seals and whales. It's a short chain. So, if we see changes in the phytoplankton, we'll almost inevitably see effects further up."The berg currently is running in a fast-moving stream of water called the Southern Antarctic Circumpolar Current Front, or SACCF.As this flow encounters the continental shelf at South Georgia, it turns to the southeast; and it does appear as though A68a has turned with it in the past day or so.The expectation is that the SACCF will take the block in a loop around the island, but there is always the risk that the berg's keel will catch somewhere in shallower waters.IMAGE COPYRIGHTMOD/CROWN COPYRIGHTimage captionOriginally some 5,800 sq km in size, A68a is now about 3,900 sq kmThe depth of A68a below the waterline is about 200m, confirms Dr Stef Lhermitte from Delft University of Technology, Netherlands. He's just checked this with data from the American IceSat-2 spacecraft.The US space agency mission carries a laser altimeter to measure the elevation of floating ice above the sea surface. Once you know this height (31-38m), some reasonably straightforward calculations will give you a value for the draught - the hidden, submerged part of the berg."That thickness is similar to the front of Larsen C before the iceberg calved," observed Dr Rob Larter from BAS."There will not have been much basal melting because at around 200m depth, the base will be in the 'winter water', the coldest part of the Southern Ocean water column."
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