No, but because Antarctica is at such a low latitude the sun does shine and never sets for a few weeks in mid-summer. In mid-winter, they experience the opposite when the sun does not rise above the horizon at all.
If you would like to know the day length on any given day at any of the stations, go to the Web Link ' Australian Antarctic Division - Sunlight Hours' to the left.
It does indeed snow in Antarctica. Blizzards are unpleasant. This continent is however in general considered a desert because of the low precipitation, but that is not zero.
The thickness of snow at the South Pole is thousands of metres - and all that came from somewhere!
It snows in all seasons, though generally not a lot. Along the coast, rain can fall during the summer when it's warmer. Elsewhere, it is cold enough to snow even in the summer, and often too cold to snow very much even then.
Most precipitation is in the form of snow, though it generally doesn't snow a lot. Much of Antarctica is too cold for snow to fall very much. Along the coast, rain does fall at times in the summer.
Generally, moisture in Antarctica falls as snow and circulates on the continent as ice crystals.
There is snow and snowflakes the snowflakes are created by snow melting together to make SNOWFLAKES.
Antarctica is covered by an ice sheet. There is no snow to speak of on the Antarctic continent: it's too dry and too cold to snow.
because it is so cold and when it snows it will freeze :)
Yes. In fact it rarely snows in Antarctica. While the continent is very cold, it is also one of the driest places on Earth. However when it does snow, that snow does not melt.
Snow is uncommon in Antarctica: it's too dry to form flakes. What little precipitation that falls to the continent, collects in the form of ice crystals. This phenomenon occurs all year.
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.
apls mountain is all i know
Only high in the mountains and on glaciers does it remain snow covered.
Mount Kilimanjaro has snow on it all year, although it is near equater because of its ALLTITIDE (height)
The only mammal that can survive in Antarctica all year is a human mammal.
All of the snow in Antarctica -- is snow in Antarctica.
Antarctica. And a country is canada
Argentina, Chile, Canada, The U.S., Norway, Finland, Sweden, Italy, Nepal, China, Russia, Greenland(Denmark owned), and Antarctica.
The snow line.
Nords?
Antarctica. Further information: Whilst it is true that you can see icebergs in Antarctica all year long, Antarctica is a continent, not a country. Iceland has ice all year round, and icebergs are evident even in Summer.
All year round. the leopard seal stay within the antarctic regions all year round feeding on penguins, fish and other sea birds.
The Alps are tall mountains that are covered with snow all year in Europe.
of course not! its warm all year round in the rainforests
Yes
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.