The Qoroq Glacier is located 3 hours by boat North of Ilulissat/Jakobshavn, not far North of Rodebay on the Western coast of Greenland. The ice wall towards the water is 100 meters or 300 feet high. It is 5 kilometers or 3.1 miles from edge to edge.
The French polar scientist Paul-Emilie Victor came to Eqi several times after World War II to conduct research projects related to the inland ice, because the area around Eqi was the easiest place from which to get heavy equipment onto the inland ice.
This glacier is extraordinary because you can get very close to the calving itself. You actually have to be careful not to get too close and get capsized by waves from ice breaking off the glacier and dropping into the water. Local boats keep a 500 meter minimum distance for safety.
If you have visited the Norwegian "Svartisen" glacier, Norway's second largest glacier, called "Black ice" because its color is darker than ice normally is, then you wonder what the Norwegians would call the Eqi glacier, which is an even darker blue.
Ice breaks off from the glacier at regular intervals and drops into the water in huge splashes. It's not easy to spot as the sound travels for at least 2 seconds before you hear the water splash. By then it's already calming down again. You need to see it happen, not depend on sound.
Contrary to the Sermeq Kujalleq or Ilulissat Glacier, ice from Eqi breaks off in relatively small sections, and the calving is more frequent.
The normal background noise from the glacier is a continuous creaking and cracking, clear evidence of the constant activity within the glacier.
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