
The team - researchers plus a BBC film crew - approached
the island in a small plane. The island's surface was judged safe
enough to land on - the plane was fitted with skis - and after a
bumpy touchdown they ground to a halt, the first expedition of its
kind.
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Soon the scientists were at work - time was limited
with the risk of the weather changing.
They planted a tracking beacon on its surface.
This will allow the island's progress to be monitored as currents
push it around the Arctic Ocean.
They also carried out a series of measurements
using a ground-penetrating radar. They found that the average of
thickness of the ice was 42-45m (138-148ft) - the equivalent of
the height of a 10-storey building. |

For 3,000 years, this colossal block of ice was
securely fixed to the coast as part of the Ayles Ice Shelf - but
now it is drifting free. Its current location is about 600km (400
miles) from the North Pole, in what is one of the fastest warming
regions on Earth.
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Although mostly flat, there were places where the
ice was cracked or piled high. |