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054 - ICEBERGS OFF THE ADELIE COAST, Antarctica (South Pole). (S 67°00' E 139°00').
These drifting icebergs recently detached from the glacial platforms of Antarctica, as can be seen from their flat shape and the ice strata that are still visible on their jagged sides. Only a small portion of each iceberg protrudes above the surface; nearly 80 percent of its volume remains submerged. Like all 480 cubic miles (2,000 km3) of ice that detach every year from Antarctica, these icebergs will slowly be eroded by the winds and waves before disappearing. Antarctica is a place of extremes: temperatures reach as low as -94° F (-70° C), and winds reach speeds of 200 miles (300 km) an hour. The continent has an area of 5,500 square miles (14 million km2) and contains 90 percent of the ice and 70 percent of the freshwater reserves of the planet. A subject of territorial dispute since the nineteenth century, Antarctica has been governed since 1959 by the Washington Treaty, which gives it international status and restricts its uses to pacific and scientific activities. The Ru
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