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		</div><p>An estimated 150,000 Adelie penguins have died in Antarctica after a giant iceberg blocked their main access to food, according to research.</p>
<p>Penguins in Cape Denison have been affected over a five-year period since the iceberg effectively acted as a blockade to the ocean.</p>
<p>The iceberg has forced the penguins to walk more than 37 miles in search of food, gradually reducing the population to just a few thousand.</p>
<p>The iceberg is about 60 miles wide and crashed in Commonwealth Bay in December 2010, blocking access to their natural feeding areas from then on.</p>
<p>The survey was conducted in 2013-14 by scientists at The Climate Change Research Centre at the University of New South Wales in Australia and New Zealand’s West Coast Penguin Trust.</p>
<p>The research was recently published in the journal Antarctic Science.</p>
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