Take a look at the related link. Looks like a foot, at least.
At the South Pole, the ice is more than 9,300 feet thick. Since not all of the ice that covers Antarctica has been measured, it's difficult to say what other thicknesses there may be. There is another example, however: Lake Vostok. The elevation of the ice at Vostok Station is 11,444 feet above sea level and the surface of the sub-glacial lake is -1,640 feet. This is thicker than the ice at the South Pole.
A little over 10 tons (20,000) pounds (about the weight of a large truck)
How thick is the ice at the north pole
Thick sheets of ice that can cover large areas of a continent are called continental glaciers or ice caps. Examples of continental glaciers are in Antarctica and Greenland The ice sheets that form in these two locations are up to 3500 meters thick. thank you a lot
The Appalachian Mountains
By starting the truck and driving onto it.
According to its Web page on Wikipedia: "the surface of the lake is minus 500m or minus 1,600 feet [below the surface of the ice at Lake Vostok (Russian) station]."
the ice for to have 1500 pounds on would have to be 8-12 inches thick so 1150 Ibs might need 6-8 inches thick
a thick sheet of ice
a thick sheet of ice
4" walking 6" snow mo be-ling 8-12" by car 12-15" by truck or anything bigger.
At the South Pole, the ice is more than 9,300 feet thick. Since not all of the ice that covers Antarctica has been measured, it's difficult to say what other thicknesses there may be. There is another example, however: Lake Vostok. The elevation of the ice at Vostok Station is 11,444 feet above sea level and the surface of the sub-glacial lake is -1,640 feet. This is thicker than the ice at the South Pole.
Varves are glacial lake deposits, usually an annual sediment of thick pale sediment denoting summer deposition when some ice melted and left silt and sand to settle in a lake, and a thin, dark layer of clay for a winter deposit when little sediment entered the lake.
Super thick!
ice be
A little over 10 tons (20,000) pounds (about the weight of a large truck)
A lake which remains in a liquid form although it is covered with ice is called an ice covered lake.