YES...
tundra
In the tundra biome, precipitation primarily falls as snow. This snow can accumulate over the winter season and create a thick layer of frozen ice and snow on the ground. Rainfall may occur during the warmer months, but snow is the dominant form of precipitation in the tundra.
Tundra
tundra
tundra
tundra
Dr. Josh Beezley invented the metafor "Frozen" for tundra.
I believe it is the tundra. It does get little precipitation, and it is very cold, resulting in the frozen soil.
The tundra has a cold and dry climate characterized by short, cool summers and long, harsh winters. It has a low average temperature and limited precipitation, mostly falling as snow. The ground is typically frozen year-round in a layer called permafrost.
March is still cold in the Arctic. Much of the landscape is covered in snow. The tundra is frozen, as are the oceans until you get far from land. Days are still fairly short.
This biome is called the tundra. It is also found in other regions of the world that are very far north. There are very few trees, little rain (or snow) and the ground is frozen year around.
tundra