
Copernical Team
Mega iceberg released 152 billion tonnes of freshwater

In July 2017, a giant iceberg, named A-68, snapped off Antarctica’s Larsen-C ice shelf and began an epic journey across the Southern Ocean. Three and a half years later, the main part of iceberg, A-68A, drifted worryingly close to South Georgia. Concerns were that the berg would run aground in the shallow waters offshore. This would not only cause damage to the seafloor ecosystem but also make it difficult for island wildlife, such as penguins, to make their way to the sea to feed. Using measurements from satellites, scientists have charted how A-68A shrunk towards the end
Sulphur dioxide from Tonga eruption spreads over Australia

IMDO, MDA complete flight tests for the Arrow Weapon System and Arrow 3 Interceptor

China's rocket technology hits the ski slopes

Capturing all that glitters in galaxies with NASA's Webb

ASU astronomer finds star fuel surrounding galaxies

NASA's James Webb telescope completes mirror alignment, heads for orbit

SwRI scientist uncovers evidence for an internal ocean in small Saturn moon

Hubble Finds a Black Hole Igniting Star Formation in a Dwarf Galaxy

Sol 3361: Keeping the Dog Leashed
