Photo: ALEXIS DELELISI/AFP via Getty

One person is dead and four others were injured after a rogue wave crashed into a Antarctic cruise ship on Tuesday.
The incident happened on theViking Polarisas it was sailing toward Ushuaia, Argentina, at the southernmost tip of the continent during a voyage to Antarctica, according to a statement on thecompany’s website.
Suzie Gooding, a North Carolina woman who was on the cruise, told local news station WRAL that they felt the impact of the huge wave on the ship.
“We wondered if we hit an iceberg,” she said. “And there are no icebergs out here, but that’s how it felt.”
She said the wave was completely unexpected. “Everything was fine until the rogue wave hit, and it was just sudden. Shocking,” Gooding said. “We didn’t know if we should get our gear ready for abandoning ship.”
Viking Cruises said the vessel — which just joined its fleet in September — “sustained limited damage.”
Images of the ship appear to show broken windows on its lower level.
The National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)defines a “rogue wave” as a one that is “greater than twice the size of surrounding waves.”
The waves, which can look like “walls of water,” are “very unpredictable, and often come unexpectedly from directions other than prevailing wind and waves,” according to the agency.
NOAA says “exactly how and when rogue waves form is still under investigation,” adding that because they are so uncommon and can form unexpectedly and disappear quickly, “measurements and analysis of this phenomenon is extremely rare.”
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Viking Cruises said it is investigating the incident and “will offer our support” to authorities.
“Our focus remains on the safety and wellbeing of our guests and crew,” the company said in astatement. “We are working directly with them to arrange return travel.”
source: people.com