February 14 - A Bergy Bit. Yes, it is an offical term.
A bergy bit is a chunk of glacial ice less than 15 feet is size.
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February 14 - A Blue Berg. The ice in the parent glacier has undergone many years of of compression, thawing and refreezing so that air originially trapped in the snow/ice is no longer part of the ice. Therefore light is not reflected around inside the ice. When light is reflected inside ice the ice appears white.
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February 16 - A large Tabular Iceberg. This massive flat-topped
iceberg was off the coast of the Antarctic mainland.
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February 16 - Shoveling ice off the deck
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Celebrating crossing the Antarctic Circle
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at 66 degrees 33 minutes 43 seconds South Latitude
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for which the "first-timers" received the Mark of the Penguin
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February 18, at 3:53 AM - We begin entering the Ross Sea
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February 18 - Headed into the ice
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