A colossal Antarctic iceberg that first broke free in the 1980s is now soaking up the summer warmth, and from orbit seems to be turning a shade of aquamarine. In this recent image from NASA’s Earth Observatory, iceberg A-23A is streaked with blue meltwater ponds and surrounded by a halo of fractured ice, signs that the long-lived “megaberg” is perhaps in its final days.

What is it?

Terra satellite captured this image on Dec. 26, 2025 and the next day an astronaut aboard the International Space Station snapped an even closer view of the meltwater ponds using a Nikon Z9 camera to do so.

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NIKON Z9

The Nikon Z9 body sat on a table indoors

(Image credit: Andy Hartup)

The Nikon Z9 is a mirrorless powerhouse, one of the top-performing digital cameras ever made and delicious overkill for astrophotography and landscapes and is even used by astronauts aboard the International Space Station. For a more in-depth look, read our Nikon Z9 review.

early January 2026, iceberg A-23A is drifting in the South Atlantic Ocean, between the eastern tip of South America and South Georgia Island.


The image of Iceberg A-23A from NASA’s Terra satellite shows various stripes of meltwater ponds where the iceberg is melting into the ocean. (Image credit: NASA Earth Observatory image by Michala Garrison, using MODIS data from NASA EOSDIS LANCE and GIBS/Worldview.)

floating ice fails.

When an iceberg as large as A-23A melts, it injects significant cold freshwater into the ocean, which can affect mixing and local circulation. This can lead to upwelling of deeper nutrient rich waters that can help fuel phytoplankton growth, which is a key foundation in the marine food web.

While icebergs are a natural part of how ice shelves and glaciers shed mass, the effects of climate change and global warming are speeding up these processes, making it a key time for researchers to watch from space and track these icy giants.

icebergs and Earth-observing satellites.