00:26To be continued...
00:47An enormous iceberg has carved from Antarctica's brunt ice shelf.
00:53After several years of desperately clinging on, the berg broke away, as confirmed by satellite data.
01:01Scientists estimate the new berg to be around 1,550 square kilometers.
01:07That's the size of Greater London, or five times the size of Malta.
01:13The brunt ice shelf borders the Coatesland coast and the Weddell Sea sector of Antarctica.
01:21Glaciologists have monitored the thick brunt ice shelf for years.
01:27The new berg carved when the crack known as Chasm 1 split northwards, severing the west part of the ice
01:34shelf.
01:36It was only a matter of time before it would meet the Halloween crack.
01:41First spotted on, you guessed it, Halloween.
01:44After several years on watch for brunt iceberg carving, we finally witnessed a long-awaited separation of the western brunt
01:51ice shelf as iceberg A81.
01:56Routine monitoring from satellites offers unparalleled views of events happening in remote regions.
02:03The Copernicus Sentinel-1 mission carries radar, which returns images regardless of day or night.
02:12This allows us year-round viewing, which is especially important through the long dark winter months.
02:21The British Antarctic Survey's Halley 6 research station, where glaciologists have been monitoring the behaviour of the ice shelf,
02:28was relocated in 2017 to a more secure location after the ice shelf was deemed unsafe.
02:37The station has remained unaffected by the carving event.
02:41There are currently 21 staff working at the station to keep scientific operations running through winter.
02:48It is now around 20 kilometres from the line of rupture.
02:55Thanks to the Copernicus Sentinel satellites,
02:58together with in-situ and airborne measurements made by the British Antarctic Survey,
03:02the safety of the Halley Base has been preserved.
03:06In February 2021, a giant berg broke off from the northern section of Brunt.
03:16Spotted by Sentinel-1, it has already drifted away from the Brunt Ice Shelf into the Weddell Sea.
03:23So, what happens now?
03:25The carving of icebergs can speed up the flow of ice from an ice shelf.
03:29If Brunt now experiences an acceleration, it could influence the behaviour of other cracks in the area.
03:36The carving and separation of the latest iceberg, A81,
03:41now focuses attention back onto the Halloween crack,
03:44whose extension could contribute to further destabilisation of the remaining eastern portion of the Brunt Ice Shelf.
03:50We will continue using the Copernicus Sentinel satellites
03:54to closely monitor the behaviour and stability of the remaining Brunt Ice Shelf.
03:58Squirrels.
04:04B
04:10When you are in the northern section of Brunt,
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