The Arctic is a sea bed: Antarctica is a continent, and a desert with less than five percent humidity. Snow in the Arctic collects on sea ice or melts when it falls into the Arctic Ocean.
There is no snow in Antarctica, rather ice crystals that blow in the constant wind.
All of the snow in Antarctica -- is snow in Antarctica.
The high interior of Antarctica receives only 50 mm (2 inches) per year, but the whole continent averages 166 mm (6.5 inches) per year. Nowhere in Antarctica does it get 7 metres (20 feet) of snow.
If you mean Kent, England; it doesn't get much snow at all compared to the rest of the UK.
All of it, only to return the next winter.
Antarctica does have a dry and wet season, but the wet season consists mainly of snow. It doesn't rain in Antarctica, and Antarctica is a desert, so there is not much snow.Another AnswerAntarctica is a desert and thus has no wet season.
Arctic foxes live in neither India or Antarctica. They only live in the Arctic.
Under some snow, yes. Like Antarctica. Under some snow, no. Like the Arctic.
yes, with exception that the arctic's ice is melting
No. Arctic foxes live in the Arctic, not the Antarctic.
Antarctica is too cold to support any animal life, plus there is no food chain on the continent to support animals.
The only desert with snow in the summer is Antarctica.
Most of Alaska gets much more snow than most of Antarctica.
None. Antarctica is covered -- 98% -- by an ice sheet.
Uh, Snow? Ice? There's not much in Antarctica.
All of the snow in Antarctica -- is snow in Antarctica.
use fuel and burn the snow into a liquid texture
Both named geographies are polar, are mostly snow and ice covered, and are extremely cold