You can drink water from Antarctica that has melted. The ice is melting at an alarming rate in Antarctica which is attributed to effects of global warming.
Yes -- it will not crack as easily as the ice from your freezer, but if you let it melt in your mouth, it is a potable source of fresh water.
Yes. Potable water is either melted ice sheet or desalinated sea water.
The ice sheet holds 100% of Antarctica's . . . ice sheet.
i think the rivers of ice in Antarctica are called glaciers.
Ice-free regions in Antarctica are generally called 'the beach'.
Nope...lots of land, even unfrozen lakes, under the ice. Basically, Antarctica is a small continent (say the size of Australia) covered by a sheet of ice...and now it's shrinking. no, underneath the ice is rocky land Edited by Danielle Robertson 5/3/2009 :P
98% of Antarctica is covered in a sheet of ice which means that only 2% is uncovered. :-)
One hundred percent of the ice found in Antarctica is...ice...in Antarctica.
If you want to eat in Antarctica, you have to bring your food with you. All you will find there is ice.
One hundred percent of the ice in Antarctica is ice.
yes ice in the antarctica shrink
Ice in the ice sheet that covers Antarctica is free of any minerals.
Antarctica's ice sheet holds about 90% of the earth's ice.
Antarctica's ice sheet represents about 90% of the earth's ice.
The largest ice in Antarctica is the ice sheet that covers 98% of the continent.
There is no reason to sell an ice cube in Antarctica.
The ice sheet holds 100% of Antarctica's . . . ice sheet.
None of Antarctica is ice. Antarctica is 100% land. The land is covered -- about 98% -- by ice, so only two percent of the land is not covered by ice.
No. Ice sits on top of Antarctica -- 98% of the continent is covered with an ice sheet.