Following is a records of the video.
Storyteller: Does this image appearance Photoshopped, phony, and even produced by aliens? You would not be alone in believing that. However, you would be incorrect. This is really a naturally happening phenomenon. What you’re seeing is a tabular iceberg. Tabular icebergs form a plateau, with a flat top. Unlike non-tabular icebergs, which generally have actually a rounded top. This iceberg was photographed in October, by NASA researcher Jeremy Harbeck. The majority of icebergs look comparable to this in the beginning, although this one is remarkably rectangle-shaped. So how are these best icebergs formed? All icebergs form when a piece or sheet of ice breaks away from a big ice rack or glacier. And since of ice’s natural crystal structure, it tends to break along straight lines.
Dr. Jan Lieser: The icebergs that we generally see are weathered. They get battered by winds and waves and they lose bits here and they shed a little, shed a piece there. This is a current sculpting occasion.
Storyteller: This iceberg broke off of the Larsen C Ice Rack in Antarctica. In time, wind, waves, and warmer water will deteriorate the iceberg and break it apart, ultimately turning it into the rounded shape you’re most likely more acquainted with.
Dr. Jan Lieser: These routine shapes, that will not stay for long. If we search for this iceberg today, which is just a couple weeks after it was initially spotted, it will not appear like that any longer at all.
Storyteller: As this tabular iceberg drifts away and alters shape, it will not look like the renowned iceberg in the picture. However it will survive on, thanks to social networks.