Experts said they noticed the crack on Oct. 14 while mapping Antarctica's Pine Island Glacier with a low-flying plane. The crack is about 18 miles long and averages about 260 feet wide. Scientists say it is growing about 6 feet wider each day.
The Pine Island Glacier is called "the weak underbelly of Antarctica," and it's thinning. But scientists say this type of cracking happens naturally every decade and is not related to global warming. They said the new iceberg could break away by the end of this year or early next.
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