In October 2011, airborne Nasa researchers made the first-ever detailed
3D measurements of a major iceberg calving event - a new iceberg 'being
born'.
The IceBridge team has now used the measurements - captured with a
3D laser imaging device - to create a 3D model of the crack in Pine
Island Glacier, and an incredible video of what it would be like to fly
through.
The animation was created by draping aerial photographs from the Digital
Mapping System - a still camera with very precise geolocation
ability—over data from the Airborne Topographic Mapper - a scanning
laser altimeter that measures changes in the surface elevation of the
ice.
Both instruments were flown on NASA's DC-8 research airplane, and the data was collected on October 26, 2011.
The crack formed in the ice shelf that extends from one of West Antarctica’s fastest-moving glaciers.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2108340/Slice-ice-Nasa-creates-incredible-video-fly-18-mile-crack-Pine-Island-glacier-3D-laser-scans.html
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