In the Arctic or Antarctic, probably on land. Polar bears and musk ox fit that description. Most marine mammals (in cold climates) have a thick layer of fat, but lack a thick layer of fur. However, the nine species of fur seals have thick fur.
A layer of blubber is useful because it keeps heat in. For a marine mammal, this saves energy that would otherwise be wasted to keep the animal warm. This is especially useful fort marine mammals that live in Arctic or Antarctic waters, which are barely above freezing temperatures and would freeze a mammal to death if it didn't have a thick layer of blubber.
you would need a space suit....
yes. actually, if all the salts were removed from the ocean, there would be enough to cover all of Earths land with a layer about 520 feet thick
its blubber that keeps them warm. they would be freezing without it. hope this helps! x
Pretty much none, not even the Sun. The thick cloud layer would prevent it.
The desert is a biome.
You could start with 100% energy for the first layer, 10% for the second layer, 1% for the third and 0.1% for the fourth layer. If the biome is very poor in producers, you could start with 50%, 5%, 0.5% there would be only 0.05% for a fourth layer and it would not support anything.
The white tigers biome would be the tundra biome.
A warm rainforest biome would be located in the highlands.
depends on how thick you want it. If you want a very thin layer, say 3", then one yard will cover it. a 6" layer would be 2 yards.
The air layer will improve the thermal insulation.
If gravastars exist, their event horizon would be surrounded by a thick layer of Bose-Einstein Condensate.