Roughly about 1/5 or 1/6 of the North American continent is covered in prairie.
Yup!
Wolves used to exist throughout much of North America. Their population today is far decreased from the range it once covered.
Im pretty sure it was glaciersglaciers
Yes, during the peak of the last ice age, North America was covered by a continental glacier. This massive ice sheet extended as far south as present-day Illinois and New York and shaped much of the landscape we see today.
During the Last Glacial Maximum, an ice sheet covered most of North America from Texas to Alaska. This ice sheet was part of the Laurentide Ice Sheet, which extended over much of Canada and parts of the northern United States during the peak of the last ice age.
Over much of eastern North America.
As of current data, approximately 10% of North America is covered in ice, primarily in areas like Greenland and parts of Canada. This ice coverage fluctuates throughout the year and can change due to weather patterns and climate conditions.
North America is land and is up north, but Antarctica is ice and is down south. Millions live in North America, but not very many live in Antarctica. North America's summer is Antarctica's winter, and North America's winter is Antarctica's summer! Also, North America is much bigger than Antarctica.
No, the Sahara is in Africa and not North America.
30%
North America is 24,709,000 km2 while the US is 9,826,675 km2; so the US covers about 40% of North America.
Yes, wolves still are found in North America but are pretty much limited to the north.