Home Page
FAQ
Publications
Documentation
Software
Movies
Image Gallery
Image Data
Data Search
Derived Products
Related Links
Contact Us
SCP FTP site

Current* Antarctic large iceberg positions derived from OSCAT and ASCAT**

* Last revised: 14:52:18 08/08/14

**Operational users please note: This list cannot possibly contain all potentially hazardous icebergs in Antarctic waters -- Scatterometers such as OSCAT and ASCAT were designed for measuring ocean winds, not icebergs. Scatterometer data is useful for tracking icebergs, but is limited. ASCAT C-band scatterometer data has much less contrast between icebergs and open water and has less resolution than OSCAT Ku-band data. Futher, as the SCP team is not an operational agency, errors are expected and we cannot be held responsible for omissions or errors in this database. Also note that the large icebergs tracked here tend to shed smaller iceberg fragments which are serious navigation hazards in nearby areas. Fragments (large and small) can drift substantial distances from their origins.

This information supplements the Antarctic Iceberg dataset maintained by the U.S. National Ice Center (NIC). If an inconsistency is observed, we recommend that NIC be considered authoritative.

This page is typically updated once or twice a week, typically on Mondays and Fridays. Positions reported here are extracted from near real-time OSCAT and/or ASCAT data. Positions reported in the full iceberg database are generated from science data and have been more accurately tracked. The full database is updated only a few times per year

 
Iceberg***   Longitude   Lattitude Most recent observation  
(day of year****)
a23a42 5'W 75 54'S 209
a5653 34'W 74 41'S 209
a5749 18'W 77 15'S 209
a6116 46'W 72 27'S 209
a6344 50'W 76 27'S 209
b09b142 50'E 66 39'S 209
b09c54 16'E 65 36'S 209
b09d29 44'E 69 2'S 209
b09f51 45'E 65 31'S 209
b09g65 40'E 66 32'S 209
b15r37 52'W 74 12'S 209
b15t51 19'E 65 49'S 209
b15x56 5'W 70 26'S 209
b1653 43'E 64 43'S 209
b17a51 22'W 59 36'S 209
b22a109 5'W 74 6'S 209
b28110 12'W 74 48'S 209
b29108 59'W 74 42'S 209
b30122 20'W 71 0'S 209
b31109 19'W 72 23'S 209
c15146 11'E 67 9'S 209
c18b113 59'E 65 29'S 209
c21b96 38'E 64 41'S 209
c2495 52'E 64 57'S 209
c28a2124 12'E 66 7'S 209
c28a87 51'E 58 57'S 209
c28b58 5'E 66 6'S 209
d1581 34'E 66 8'S 209
d2036 45'E 69 9'S 209
d2179 6'E 66 23'S 209
d2286 47'E 65 57'S 209
uk09380 46'E 66 34'S 209
uk31592 21'E 65 47'S 209
uk316140 4'E 65 57'S 209
uk32154 6'W 61 14'S 209
uk32256 51'W 71 33'S 209

*** National Ice Center (NIC) iceberg designations are used where possible. Additional fragments are numbered. Icebergs not designated by NIC are denoted as "uk". Fragments not separately tracked by NIC may have additional numbers following their designation.

**** UTC day-of-year. Day of year chart


BYU Antarctic Iceberg Database - Comprehensive historic database of Antarctic iceberg positions derived from enhanced resolution scatterometer image time series spanning from 1978 through the present.

Papers on QuikSCAT iceberg tracking:
Paper (2.1MB pdf) K.M. Stuart and D.G. Long, "Tracking large tabular icebergs using the SeaWinds Ku-band microwave scatterometer", Deep-Sea Research Part II, doi:10.1016/j.dsr2.2010.11.004, Vol. 59, pp. 1285-1300, 2011.
Paper (620 kB pdf) D.G. Long, Jarom Ballantyne, and C. Bertoia, "Is the Number of Icebergs Really Increasing?" EOS, Transactions of the American Geophysical Union, Vol. 83, No. 42, pp 469 & 474, 15 Oct. 2002
)