Glaciers
Glaciers
Thick sheets of ice that can cover large areas of a continent are called continental glaciers or ice caps. Examples of continental glaciers are in Antarctica and Greenland The ice sheets that form in these two locations are up to 3500 meters thick. thank you a lot
A glacier that spreads out over a large expanse of land, such as an island or continent, is referred to as an ice sheet. These ice sheets are massive bodies of ice that cover vast areas of land and can be several kilometers thick. Greenland and Antarctica are examples of regions where ice sheets are found.
There are several words in your question that can be confusing. First, Antarctica is a continent, not a hemisphere. (Hemispheres cover halves of the planet.) The continent of Antarctica does contain about 90% of the earth's store of ice.
Galileo
To protect them from the sun hotness
Antarctica is covered by an ice sheet that covers about 98% of the continent.
The ice sheet that covers Antarctica is a 98% coverage of the land mass that is the continent.
An iceberg is a large piece of ice that breaks off from an ice shelf and drifts in the ocean. They can vary in size from small chunks to massive blocks of ice.
It can cover much of a hemisphere, as the ice sheets did in the Pleistocene Ice Age.
Ninety-eight percent of the continent is covered by ice.
Blocks on Ice happened in 2012.