a thick sheet of ice
a thick sheet of ice
A glacier is a thick sheet of ice.
The ice sheet exceeds 1500 meters in both of these ice sheets, with the Arctic ice sheet referring to the Greenland Ice Sheet.
A glacier is a thick sheet of ice.
The Laurentide Ice Sheet was thought to be two miles (3.2 km) thick around Nunavik Canada.
98% of the land is covered with a continental ice sheet.
The ice sheet that covers 98% of Antarctica contains aboput 70% of the earth's fresh water and about 90% of the earth's store of ice. At the South Pole, the ice sheet is almost two miles thick.
A. Canada was covered with ice thousands of feet thick. C. Much of the northern United States was ice covered.
The Antarctic ice sheet is considered a single ice sheet, with several named shelves at the continent's beaches.
The maximum thickness of ice in the Antarctic ice sheet is 15,670 feet. It averages 7,300 feet on the eastern side and 4,285 feet on the western side.
The ice sheet holds 100% of Antarctica's . . . ice sheet.