
        It was freezing - rather them than me 
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        Still water with the ice dampening any waves 
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        The largest icebergs used to be up to 1km in height, but now that the glacier has receded onto land, 500m is a more usual maximum these days. With 90% submerged, that means they can tower around 50m above the water.  
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        The fjord is over 1km deep so they have no problems floating down.  But at the mouth there is a bar of terminal moraine, marking the furthest extent of the glacier during the last ice age, and here it is only around 300m deep.  
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        The largest icebergs get stranded and can sit here for a number of years before they breakup enough to be able to float off 
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        Our boat was a fair bit smaller than this one 
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        The caves were probably once meltwater lakes within the glacier 
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        There will be a big splash when those cracks turn into breaks 
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        The dirt is ground up rocks from the sides or bottom of the glacier 
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        A big pile of rock debris that has floated down 
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        This one has a meltwater waterfall (bottom centre-right) 
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        The Icefjord here is the biggest single source of the icebergs that end up in the North Atlantic 
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        The iceberg that sank the Titanic could well have been stranded here for a while first 
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        Me taking photos 
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        The blue stripes were probably water channels within the glacier 
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