That is usually called a glacier
It is called rock flour.
A glacier forms under certain terrain conditions and where more snow falls in the winter than melts in the summer.
A crevasse is a large fissure, or crack, in something although it is usually applied to a glacier.
The country that lies under a continental glacier is Finland. Finland is still emerging from the sea. The weight of the glaciers depressed the land and it's slowly in the process of rising up.
The cease-fire left a third of Kashmir under Pakistani control and the rest under Indian control.
because the military is not properly under the control of a constitution and he who has control of the military can influence the balance of power.
A big part of it known as OCCUPIED STATE OF JAMMU & KASHMIR is under the control of India and another fragment namely AZAD KASHMIR (AZAD means FREE) is under the control of Pakistan but AZAD KASHMIR has its own President, Prime Minister, and own governess system. A bit of Kashmir namely Aksai Chin is under the control of China.
Yes he will when there is a need to come and the security situation is under control.
That is usually called a glacier
LOC also know as Line of Control is the border between Indian held Kashmir and the part of Kashmir under control of Pakistan. After interference of United Nations in 1948, both Pakistan and India agreed to stop ongoing war and United Nations took responsibility of organizing a plebisit for the people of Kashmir whether to join Pakistan or in India but, this poll is still pending.
Southwest Pakistan was under the Mauryan Empire.
A crevasse is a deep open crack in a glacier. It is formed when a magma chamber under a glacier causes melting and cracking and causes the glacier to slide into the ocean on the magma
Greenland & Antarctica.
Yes there are quite alot, especially in Iceland
Its true.
When the weight of snow and ice is great enough the glacier starts moving downhill under the influence of gravity. This point is determined by the relationship between accumulation and wastage of the glacier.