The European Space Agency has been the main eye in the sky for and calving event that earlier this month.
But NASA isn’t blind to what’s going on by any means. And on Tuesday, the agency released an image that rivals the satellite views its European counterpart has been sharing for months.
Beholda shot of the iceberg captured between July 14 and July 21 by the Landsat-8 satellite.
The photo above captured by NASA's Landsat-8 shows iceberg A68 as it shifted away from the Larsen C ice shelf over the period of July 14 to July 21, 2017.
(NASA Goddard)
It might look like a film negative but it’s much more high tech than that. Landsat-8 has a thermal infrared sensor on board, which captures images based on temperature. In the case of this image, the black is the cooler ice while the bright white is the warmer ocean waters surrounding it.
The image is equal parts eye candy and scientific goldmine. The dark patches between the ice shelf and iceberg A68 show the icy detritus left behind in the wake of the massive calving event. The thin slivers of white cutting across the iceberg also of how the elemental forces of wind and water are clawing away at , which contains enough ice to fill 463 million Olympic swimming pools.
The gray areas laced with white on the right side of the image show the sea ice that iceberg A68 will have to push through as currents carry it off into the Weddell Sea and points yet unknown.
So yeah, NASA has delivered a pretty spectacular and informative satellite image. Your move, ESA.
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