The small glaciers that exist in high mountainous areas were called mountain glaciers or cirque glaciers.
its not mountain glaciers but its valley glaciers
mountain glaciers
Valley Glaciers :)
Two kinds of glaciers are valley glaciers and ice sheets. Valley glaciers are long, narrow glaciers that form in mountain valleys, while ice sheets are vast, continent-sized glaciers that cover large land areas. The main difference is in their size and location, with valley glaciers typically being smaller and found in mountainous regions, while ice sheets are much larger and exist in polar regions.
Glaciers are found on every continent on Earth, with the largest concentrations in polar regions such as Antarctica and Greenland. They also exist in high mountain ranges like the Alps, Himalayas, Rockies, and Andes, where they are fed by snowfall and high elevations.
The opposite of biosphere is abiosphere, which refers to areas devoid of life such as deserts, glaciers, or areas with extreme environmental conditions where life cannot exist.
Glaciers
No, glaciers can develop below the snow line. While the snow line is the altitude at which snow accumulates and exceeds melting, glaciers can form and persist in areas where snow falls and compacts into ice faster than it melts. Glaciers can exist in both high-altitude and polar regions.
Alpine glaciers, even though they move, are confined to mountain valleys, which in most instances had previously been a stream valley. Continental ice sheets exist on a much larger scale. These huge masses flow out in all directions from one or more centers of the land. They cover the entire continent, hence the name, and extend out toward the sea. Only two exist today: Greenland and Antarctica.
Ice can naturally exist in tropical regions at high elevations where the temperature is cooler, such as in mountain ranges or in glaciers. Additionally, man-made ice can be found in facilities like ice factories or refrigeration units.
Light Mountain? That mountain does not exist.
It doesn't exist. It is fictional mountain for the story.