Good chance of it if the bear hit the tiger right and broke its neck or a limb. A broken neck is quick death. A broken leg is a lingering slow death for a hunter.
It's a POLAR BEAR, the largest bear (alongside the omnivorous Alaskan brown bear the 'Kodiak bear'') and the largest land predator on earth. It can weight up to 1500 pounds, it has a bone crushing bite force (42 teeth closing down with a force over 440 psi), and takes down walruses. It's thick blubber(4 inches of it) would protect it from most major damage, and the fact that it's paws are gigantic (can rip off a head of an adult human with a single blow), means it could destroy the tiger within minutes maybe. Yes, some Siberian tigers have been known to kill grizzly bears, but a polar bear is just colossal (stands fully at upright an adult males can stands 10 feet in their hinder legs). They live in the Arctic, another factor that gives the bear the advantage - the Arctics a snowy wasteland. POLAR BEAR! (But I do still love tigers - they're awesome) I totally agree, the polar bear is the biggest land carnivore growing to a length of around 2.5 metres which is basically just under 2 metres, so yes the polar bear would win. Possibly, possibly not. Polar bears are quite a bit larger than Siberian tigers are, so there could be an advantage there. However, polar bears and Siberian tigers rarely, if ever, meet, so any fight between these two animals is nigh to impossible. A polar bear could kill any tiger with ease, but these two animals would not really meet in the wild.
The polar bear is the only mammal in North America that will actively hunt human beings. A Polar Bear can take a human head off with a single blow of its paw. Polar bears have very sensitive noses and can smell blood as far as 20 miles away.
The polar bear might have a chance to win because it can tear up the moose. With its strength and size advantage, a polar bear could break a moose's head with one swipe of its claws and a shatter of its horns with paws too. However, a moose would often run off from the polar bear unless if it got cornered. If that happens, the moose would try to kill the polar bear with its antlers, but the polar bear would kill it first.Probably the polar bear because when the moose tries hitting it with antlers, the polar bear would swipe its head to death.Another AnswerThe polar bear would most likely win this fight. A moose has those antlers that are strong enough to knock down a lion or a black bear with them if contacted at them. But a polar bear has those strengths and power with its claws to blow down the moose's head before the moose had a good chance to gore the polar bear to death. However, a polar bear can even kill and take down a musk ox without getting badly injured because a polar bear's size plus strength is good enough to kill such animals. A grizzly bear might also have a chance to kill a moose because the grizzly bear has been known to attack adult bull moose and kill them with their strength of claws. If a polar bear fight a moose, the polar bear would end up having a good prey to eat.
Because winds are named for where they come from, polar easterlies blow from the poles in the east out to the west.
Polar easterlies. They are cold, dry winds that blow from the polar high-pressure areas towards lower latitudes.
The winds that blow from the North Pole are called polar easterlies, while the winds that blow from the South Pole are called polar westerlies. These winds are cold, dry, and they originate from the high-pressure areas near the poles.
It occurs both at the North and South Pole
stuffing and the skin of the bear then you get a leaf blower make a hole in the bear put the stuffing in the leaf blower then blow it into the hole then when there is enough stop the leaf blow then sow the bear up
Winds that blow from the north pole and south pole are called polar easterlies. They originate from the polar high-pressure areas and blow towards the lower pressure zones at around 60 degrees latitude.
north to south
Polar Easterlies
The Arctic sea ice, where it can hunt seals during the winter. Polar bears use their acute sense of smell to locate the prey, then stalk silently and positions itself for the attack. The prey is dispatched by the bears teeth, or by a heavy blow from its powerful fore limbs.