Rome's size ice section splits into Antarctica

A section of Rome's size has split into Antarctica, according to satellite images. Scientists said that all that was left of Conger ice became an iceberg. This comes after Antarctica had temperatures 4 degrees higher than usual, with new records set and a place very high above the point [...]
Scientists said that all that was left of Conger ice became an iceberg.
This comes after Antarctica had temperatures 4 degrees higher than usual, with new records set and a place very high above the melting point.
The Arctic has also experienced temperatures much hotter than normal, causing alarm from scientists who say it is unusual “” that both poles melt at the same time.
The US National Ice Centre said an iceberg was born from the ice section in the Wilkes region, reports Independent, broadcasts Klankosova.tv.
The ice had a dimension of 2,000 square miles [2,000 sq km] about the size of Rome.












