Striped Iceberg Photographs
Summary:Email claims that attached photographs show several spectacular striped icebergs found in the Antarctic area (
Full commentary below).
Status:True
Example:(Submitted, May 2008)
Subject: Striped Icebergs
Amazing striped icebergs
Icebergs in the Antarctic area sometimes have stripes, formed by
layers of snow that react to different conditions.
Blue stripes are often created when a crevice in the ice sheet
fills up with meltwater and freezes so quickly that no bubbles form.
When an iceberg falls into the sea, a layer of salty seawater can
freeze to the underside. If this is rich in algae, it can form a
green stripe.
Brown, black and yellow lines are caused by sediment, picked up
when the ice sheet grinds downhill towards the sea.
Commentary:
According to this email forward, the attached images are photographs of amazing striped icebergs taken in the Antarctic region. At first glance, these images might seem almost too beautiful and spectacular to be genuine and some commentators have suggested that they have been altered in an image manipulation program such as Photoshop. However, such icebergs do indeed exist and the photographs are authentic.
A
March 2008 article published in the UK's Daily Mail notes that the photographs were taken by Norwegian sailor Oyvind Tangen from aboard a research vessel. The iceberg photographs were snapped in an area several hundred miles north of the Antarctic. As the message explains, blue stripes are formed as iceberg layers melt and refreeze quickly, while green stripes are created by the freezing of algae-rich sea water. Other coloured stripes, such as black, brown and yellow, were created by sediment collected by the ice as it moved down a hillside towards the sea. The icebergs may have taken hundreds or even thousands of years to form.
While this version of the message is factual, a variant of the message is also circulating that tacks on a series of photographs of another Antarctic ice formation, one of which is included below:
This "frozen wave" variant of the message includes the following description:
Antarctica Frozen Wave Pixs - Nature is amazing! The water froze the instant the wave broke through the ice. That's what it is like in Antarctica where it is the coldest weather in decades. Water freezes the instant it comes in contact with the air. The temperature of the water is already some degrees below freezing. Just look at how the wave froze in mid-air!!!
These photographs are also authentic, but the accompanying description is false. The images
do not show waves somehow instantly frozen in place. Instead, they show ice formations created by glaciation, melting and refreezing, and other natural forces, over very long periods of time. The "ice wave" photographs are not related to the striped iceberg images and were taken at a different time and place by a different photographer, scientist Tony Travouillon.
The series of "frozen wave" images began circulating quite some time before the striped iceberg photographs first made their appearance. I discuss them in more detail in
another Hoax-Slayer article.
References:
Revealed: The Antarctic iceberg that looks like a giant humbug
Rainbow iceberg in the Antarctic
Frozen Tidal Wave Photographs
Last updated: 20th November 2009
First published: 23rd May 2008
Write-up by Brett M. Christensen