Science | icebergs Rogue Iceberg May Alter Global Circulation Luxembourg-sized chunk from area where dense water forms By Will McCahill Posted Feb 26, 2010 7:37 PM CST Copied A 60-mile long iceberg known as B9B, right, crashes into the Mertz Glacier Tongue, left, in the Australian Antarctic Territory, creating a new 48-mile-long iceberg. (Commonwealth of Australia) An iceberg the size of Luxembourg is floating free in the waters north of Antarctica, jarred loose by the impact of another iceberg—and it’s so big it could change the water movements at the root of global weather patterns. The area around the Mertz Glacier generates much dense, salty water key to ocean circulation, scientists tell Reuters—and with more open water now there, the rate of formation for that Antarctic water could slow. Read These Next NYC police encountered a horrific scene after a fire was reported. Amy Coney Barrett weighs in a possible third Trump term. Somebody just shot Charlie Kirk. Police found a body in the trunk of a singer's Tesla. Report an error