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Cottage Life

How Iceberg Alley got its name and why it may be under threat

Iceberg Alley, the stretch of coast ranging from Labrador to Newfoundland, is the southernmost region of the northern hemisphere where one can regularly see icebergs. But hurry up! As the planet continues to warm, Iceberg Alley may soon lose its name.

Iceberg sightseeing is a common—and much-anticipated—activity in Newfoundland. Every spring, locals and visitors brave the region’s damp and chilly weather—it’s one of the foggiest places on the planet—to scrutinize the horizon for large white objects or embark on boat tours, hoping that luck will be on their side.

But with iceberg counts ranging from zero to more than 2,000 per year, booking a trip in advance to see these 10,000-year-old blocks of ice can be a gamble.

 

Watch a gutsy Newfoundland swimmer brave frigid waters to reach an iceberg

 

10,000-year-old ice

Every year, hundreds of billions of tonnes of ice, equivalent to more than 100 million Olympic pools of water, once melted, is shed from Greenland’s glaciers into the ocean. This phenomenon is called calving.

The bulk of the ice calving from Greenland’s glaciers form icebergs. While about 10-50 per cent of these icebergs melt directly in Greenland’s fjords, the majority are carried away by ocean currents.

A map of the North Atlantic Ocean showing the flow of icebergs from Greenland to the coast of Newfoundland.
The icebergs that arrive in Newfoundland calve from the west coast of Greenland and follow ocean currents to the south. Data: General Bathymetric Chart of the Oceans.
(Frédéric Cyr), Author provided

The Greenland ice sheet is the result of thousands of years of snow accumulation that has reached a thickness of more than one kilometre. The pressure that comes from the enormous weight transforms the snow into ice. The same pressure pushes the glaciers—rivers of ice funnelled by numerous fjords—towards the ocean where they calve and form icebergs.

A subset of these icebergs, mostly originating from the west coast of Greenland, will reach Newfoundland. While these icebergs can live for as long as a decade, those reaching Newfoundland are generally one to two years old.

Amazing photos of icebergs off the coast of Newfoundland

Sinking of the Titanic

The most famous of these icebergs is probably the one that sank the Titanic just south of the tip of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland in 1912. That year was not an abnormal one for icebergs, with 1,038 icebergs reported. Following this tragedy, in 1913, the International Ice Patrol, operated by the U.S. Coast Guard on behalf of several maritime nations, was created to monitor iceberg dangers for ships in the North Atlantic.

The International Ice Patrol’s annual count of the number of icebergs that slip south of 48 degrees north provides the longest and most reliable time series of icebergs in Newfoundland. In an average year, nearly 800 icebergs are expected to cross the boundary, which lies just north of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland.

Graphic showing the high variability in the number of observed icebergs over the past 122 years.
Number of icebergs observed, 1900-2021.
(Frédéric Cyr), Author provided

These annual counts are extremely variable and affected by the climate of the North Atlantic. The 1980s and ‘90s were an especially cold period in the region, and more than 1,500 icebergs were observed during some of those years, with a record high of 2,202 in 1984. More recently, 1,515 icebergs were spotted in 2019, a year characterized with colder than normal spring temperatures and immediately following another cold period in the mid-2010s.

But these numbers decrease drastically during years characterized by milder winters and an early spring. This occurred in 2010 and 2021, where only one iceberg was observed; in 2011, which saw two icebergs; and in 2013, where 13 icebergs were recorded. Only two years, 1966 and 2006, in the 122-year time series have reported no icebergs journeying south of 48 degrees north.

13 photos that show the majesty of glaciers and icebergs

 

An uncertain future

With the planet warming up as a result of anthropogenic climate change, the Greenland ice sheet is losing mass. While this may suggest that more icebergs will calve into the ocean, it is far from guaranteed that this will lead to more sightseeing opportunities in Newfoundland. And the numbers may lie, as improvements in iceberg-detecting technology may be responsible for an apparent upward trend in counts.

The environmental parameters that control the number of icebergs in Newfoundland in a given year remain unclear. However, it appears that a warmer climate definitely leads to fewer or simply no icebergs at all in Newfoundland.

For example, when looking at the region’s three warmest years on record—1966, 2010 and 2021—only zero, one and one icebergs were reported. These outliers may well become the new norm as climate projections suggest with a high level of confidence that the frequency and severity of extreme events, such as an anomalously warm year, will increase in the future.

While the Newfoundland iceberg sightseeing tourism industry may well have benefited from a succession of exceptional iceberg seasons linked to a recent rebound in cold ocean conditions in the mid-2010s, its future is less certain.

Will the Iceberg Alley lose its name? It would be unfortunate, but it is possible. For the moment there is still time to enjoy these 10,000-year-old remnants of the past. So hurry up before it’s too late!The Conversation

Frédéric Cyr is an adjunct professor in Physical Oceanography at Memorial University of Newfoundland.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

 

Categories
Potins

Kate Winslet hates Photoshop

Kate Winslet hates having her photos retouched.

The ‘Titanic’ beauty admits she finds it frustrating when people edit photos to look a certain way and has banned a company from retouching her advert campaign as she feels she has a ”responsibility to the younger generation of women”.

She told E! News: ”I can only ever speak for myself and I can only ever do things that are important to me and it’s a hope that other people might follow suit but it does feel important to me because I do think we have a responsibility to the younger generation of women.

”I think they do look to magazines, I think they do look to women who have been successful in their chosen careers and they want people to look up to, and I would always want to be telling the truth about who I am to that generation because they’ve got to have strong leaders. We’re all responsible for raising strong young women, so these are things that are important to me.”

And the 40-year-old star previously insisted she would rather be told she looks ”older than stoned”.

She said: ”I have wrinkles here, which are very evident. And I will particularly say when I look at movie posters, ‘You guys have airbrushed my forehead. Please can you change it back?’

”I’d rather be the woman they’re saying ‘She’s looking older’ about than ‘She’s looking stoned.”’

Categories
Potins

Kate Winslet hates Photoshop

Kate Winslet hates having her photos retouched.

The ‘Titanic’ beauty admits she finds it frustrating when people edit photos to look a certain way and has banned a company from retouching her advert campaign as she feels she has a ”responsibility to the younger generation of women”.

She told E! News: ”I can only ever speak for myself and I can only ever do things that are important to me and it’s a hope that other people might follow suit but it does feel important to me because I do think we have a responsibility to the younger generation of women.

”I think they do look to magazines, I think they do look to women who have been successful in their chosen careers and they want people to look up to, and I would always want to be telling the truth about who I am to that generation because they’ve got to have strong leaders. We’re all responsible for raising strong young women, so these are things that are important to me.”

And the 40-year-old star previously insisted she would rather be told she looks ”older than stoned”.

She said: ”I have wrinkles here, which are very evident. And I will particularly say when I look at movie posters, ‘You guys have airbrushed my forehead. Please can you change it back?’

”I’d rather be the woman they’re saying ‘She’s looking older’ about than ‘She’s looking stoned.”’

Categories
Potins

Leonardo DiCaprio won’t have a joint birthday party with Kate Winslet

Leonardo DiCaprio refuses to have a joint 40th birthday party with Kate Winslet.

The ‘Divergent’ star – who will celebrate the milestone in October 2015 – has been close friends with the actor for almost 20 years and he even walked her down the aisle during her secret wedding to Ned Rocknroll in 2012, but she admits he likes to be the centre of attention so will host his own bash when he turns 40 next month.

She told the November issue of Marie Claire magazine: ”He’s 40 this year and I’m 40 next – that’s weird. Isn’t that weird?

”He wouldn’t have a joint party with me, he really wouldn’t. Definitely not. He likes to have his moments… but also I don’t think I’d want to have a joint party with him, more to the b**ody point!”

But Kate insists they are still best friends and formed a close bond because they ”needed each other” when they first found fame after co-starring in ‘Titanic’ in 1997.

She said: ”I think the reason that friendship works is because there was never any romantic thing.

”He always saw me as one of the boys; I’ve never really been a girly-girl.

”We needed each other to lean on because we were very young and working all kinds of crazy bl**dy hours and it was a shock to the system.”

Categories
Potins

Leonardo DiCaprio won’t have a joint birthday party with Kate Winslet

Leonardo DiCaprio refuses to have a joint 40th birthday party with Kate Winslet.

The ‘Divergent’ star – who will celebrate the milestone in October 2015 – has been close friends with the actor for almost 20 years and he even walked her down the aisle during her secret wedding to Ned Rocknroll in 2012, but she admits he likes to be the centre of attention so will host his own bash when he turns 40 next month.

She told the November issue of Marie Claire magazine: ”He’s 40 this year and I’m 40 next – that’s weird. Isn’t that weird?

”He wouldn’t have a joint party with me, he really wouldn’t. Definitely not. He likes to have his moments… but also I don’t think I’d want to have a joint party with him, more to the b**ody point!”

But Kate insists they are still best friends and formed a close bond because they ”needed each other” when they first found fame after co-starring in ‘Titanic’ in 1997.

She said: ”I think the reason that friendship works is because there was never any romantic thing.

”He always saw me as one of the boys; I’ve never really been a girly-girl.

”We needed each other to lean on because we were very young and working all kinds of crazy bl**dy hours and it was a shock to the system.”

Categories
Potins

Celine Dion doesn’t want her heart to go on

Celine Dion doesn’t want ‘My Heart Will Go On’ played at her funeral.

While the 45-year-old songstress is grateful for the success of her hit ballad – which featured on the soundtrack to 1997 movie ‘Titanic’ – she is wary of the career-defining song following her into the afterlife.

She said: ”I’m going to die with this song. It’s a good problem to have, when you’re part of a classic and you know that you’re going to die with it. [But] when I die, though, please don’t play the song.”

‘My Heart Will Go On’ has become one of the best-selling singles of all time, with 15 million record sales worldwide, and even earned Celine an Oscar, but the French-Canadian star said she was initially reluctant to record the signature track.

In an interview to air on UK TV’s ‘The Jonathan Ross Show’ tomorrow (09.11.13), she explained: ”I didn’t want to sing ‘My Heart Will Go On’ … thank God they didn’t listen to me! I didn’t really like the song at first. I wasn’t sure. I did another song for a movie before and it was very successful and I thought we were pushing our luck.

”And [my husband and manager, René Angélil] said, ‘Let’s just do a demo, let’s give it a try and we’ll see after.’ The demo is actually the real recording, I never sang the song again … Well, except three million times after that live.”

Celine isn’t the only star with qualms about the song’s enduring legacy, as ‘Titanic’ actress Kate Winslet admitted last year she feels like ”throwing up” when she hears it because people insist on playing it whenever she’s in their presence.

She moaned: ”I wish I could say, ‘Oh listen, everybody! It’s the Celine Dion song!’ But I don’t. I just have to sit there, you know, kind of straight-faced with a massive internal eye roll.”

Categories
Potins

Kate Winslet couldn’t watch 3D nude scene

Kate Winslet wouldn’t be able to watch herself naked in 3D.

The British actress turned up to celebrate the release of ‘Titanic 3D’ at London’s Royal Albert Hall last night (27.03.12), but admits she would not be staying to see the intimate scene between her and Leonardo DiCaprio’s character.

Asked how she would feel seeing herself nude on the big screen, she responded: "Terrible, wouldn’t you? I’m not going to look, I’ll be in the bar by that point."

Kate – who played the role of Rose DeWitt Bukater in the romantic movie based around the sinking of the iconic cruise liner in 1912 – added it would be strange to see herself back when she was younger.

She said: "It is like being forced to go through a photo album of your former self for three and a half hours solidly.

"It’s quite strange but the film is still wonderful and it looks incredible. I haven’t seen the whole film in a very long time, I’ve seen little pieces of it, but it’s a whole different me and we look much younger and our acting was different, hopefully not as good as now."

Others to walk the red carpet at the event included the movie’s director James Cameron and co-star Billy Zane.
 

Categories
Nouvelles quotidiennes

Titanic dive expedition in 2012

Next April 2012 will mark 100 years since the sinking of the famous ocean liner Titanic, after it struck an iceberg in the North Atlantic.

To mark the milestone, travel company, Tematis, is offering 40 participants the opportunity to board a special submarine, two at time, and dive 3,800 meters (12,500 feet) for an up close and personal view of the wreck.

The 8 to 10-hour diving period allows underwater tourist a chance to admire the Titanic from every angle. From the bow of the boat, one can even see the grand staircase.

In order to sign up for the trip, participants must successfully undergo a medical check-up, and are warned that they shouldn’t consider the dive if they suffer from claustrophobia.

One final detail – the 13-day trip from St John’s, Newfoundland, costs $60,000.

Categories
Nouvelles quotidiennes

New Titanic museum in Belfast

Next year will mark the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic in 1912, and the Titanic Belfast exhibition, slated to open in April 2012, is being constructed to help commemorate the occasion, reports Routard.

The $160 million project will be housed in an ultra-modern steel and glass building designed to look like the hulls of four ships from the ground, while from overhead, they resemble the white star logo of the company which operated the Titanic.

The building’s exterior will include reflecting pools and a walking trail that takes visitors through Belfast’s industrial past. The interior, meanwhile, will lead guests through the full and fateful history of the ship, from her construction in the industrial city through her maiden voyage to her fate on the floor of the ocean.

"Visitors will take a fantastic ride through the real sights, smells and sounds of the shipyard to a huge video installation of the dark, deep waters of the North Atlantic," explains the official website.

"From full-sized propellers to the smallest piece of crystal-ware and from the hope-filled vision of the designers to the tragedy of the voyage, visitors will experience every aspect of Titanic’s fascinating story."

Categories
Nouvelles quotidiennes

Titanic memorial cruise to set sail in 2012

A cruise to commemorate the Titanic, will allow 694 passengers to trace the path of the legendary ship, reports the Daily Mail. The Azamara Journey will travel the route in reverse from New York to Southampton, sans iceberg, of course.

The intention is to commemorate the one hundredth anniversary of the first tickets sold for the fateful voyage. This is actually the second cruise on offer, as the first one, travelling from Southampton to New York, sold out two years ago. The blockbuster 1997 American epic romance and disaster film, helped popularize the tragic voyage.

One hundred years to the day, on April 14, the two ships will meet at the exact spot of the tragedy at 2:20 am – the time it sank – to honor the 1,578 men, women and children who died in one of the deadliest peacetime maritime disasters in history.

Organizers say the cruise is not in poor taste, and point out that it’s a respectful memorial cruise. If you’re not too morbid or afraid of icebergs, the all-inclusive 8-day trip starts around $7,000.