No. If all the ice on Antarctica melts, it will raise sea levels round the world by 60 metres (200 feet).
It melts the ice making more water which evetually will flood 8/9 ths of the world
Deep enough to float your boat.
It's in the ice that melt over the ice plateu and fall to the water and floats until it melts.
In Antarctica, water exists as a solid in the form of ice, a liquid in the form of meltwater from glaciers and snow, and a gas in the form of water vapor in the atmosphere. The extreme cold temperatures in Antarctica keep water predominantly in its solid state, but during the summer months, some ice melts to form liquid water.
No. There is not enough water locked up as ice to completely flood all of the land all around the world.
Melting of Antarctica's ice shelves occurs underwater, based on warming ocean water. which melts the shelves from underneath. This phenomenon occurs all year and is not limited to summer.
Unless scientists have validated that if and when Antarctica melts, the rise in the ocean levels will flood all of the earth, then no all of the animals will not die. There are many species that naturally will move to higher ground as a matter of their natural routine, others will adapt and instinct may drive them to higher ground.Animals also include fish, so unless the ice contains harmful toxins that can kill fish, fish and water mammals will survive.
Flood assumes the presence of liquids- and we do not know enough about the surface yet. However, it would be a flood of liquid ammonia or methane- too cold for water to flow.
the ice is a solid and when melted it becomes a liquid but if heated hot enough it will evapourate -does that help?
Water liquid melts faster because denisty of juice is more compared to water. Hence the Water liquid melts sooner.
1st it "changes" into water, and if heated long enough, at high enough temperature, it "changes" to steam, then, it eventually evaporates.
Yes maybe even hundreds of times over