The world's largest iceberg is shedding large chunks of ice in the South Atlantic Ocean nearly 40 years since it first broke off from Antarctica's Filchner Ice Shelf.

An image from NASA 's Aqua satellite has shown new ice chunks near South Georgia that have broken off the iceberg named A-23A as it drifts in the southern part of the South Atlantic Ocean, around 1,500 miles north of its birthplace, according to a statement from NASA.

Scientists have been closely monitoring A-23A due to concerns that it may collide with South Georgia, the largest of nine remote islands that form the South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands, "potentially threatening a delicate ecosystem which is home to penguins and seals," the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) noted in January.

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