Arched iceberg floating off the western Antarctic Peninsula, Southern Ocean
© Steven Kazlowski/Nature Picture Librar
Arched iceberg, western Antarctic Peninsula, Southern Ocean
A sculpted arch of ice rises from the Southern Ocean along the Antarctic Peninsula, one of the fastest-warming regions on Earth. This formation began as compacted snow that turned into glacial ice over thousands of years. Eventually, part of a glacier or floating ice shelf fractured and broke free—a process known as calving—creating a drifting iceberg.
Icebergs are classified by size and shape. To qualify, a mass must tower more than 4 metres above sea level, yet nearly 90% of it remains hidden below the surface. Flat-topped 'tabular' forms are common in Antarctica, while eroded features like this arch fall into irregular, non-tabular categories.
Though seemingly barren, these floating giants support life. Algae cling to their undersides, feeding swarms of krill, which sustain fish, seals and whales. As ice melts, it releases nutrients that fertilise surrounding waters, turning these frozen sculptures into mobile ecosystems.
Related Images
Bing Today Images
Icebergs near Cuverville Island, Antarctica
Paradise Harbour, Antarctica
Icebergs, Antarctica
Mer de Glace on the Mont Blanc massif, Chamonix, France
Ice cave in the Mendenhall Glacier, Alaska, United States
Gentoo penguins, Antarctica
Natural arch carved in an iceberg, Antarctica
Perito Moreno Glacier in Patagonia's Los Glaciares National Park, Argentina