LOOK: NASA photos show Antarctic Ice in decline

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Apart from its work beyond the cosmos, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) also conducts studies to further understand the connection between polar regions and the global climate system.

For the past nine years, its special project, “Operation IceBridge,” has been observing the evolution of polar ice caps by measuring snow depth, ice elevation and thickness, surface temperature, bed topography and other characteristics of sea ice, ice sheets and glaciers, Fortune reports.

NASA shared the stunning images on its social media accounts, captured by Getty Images photojournalist Mario Tama while aboard a retrofitted 1966 Lockheed P-3 aircraft in Ushuaia, Argentina, earlier this month.

The photos featured an up-close glimpse of the massive A68 iceberg, calved from Larsen B Ice Shelf last July.

Nearby ice shelves, meanwhile, have already disintegrated due to global warming, including the aforementioned Larsen B Ice Shelf, which was estimated to be larger than the whole state of Delaware.

NASA also warned that finding from the “IceBridge data” indicated that the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, as well as the East Antarctic Ice Sheet, has become vulnerable to melting due to the increase of air and sea temperatures.  Khristian Ibarrola /ra

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