Yup!
Roughly about 1/5 or 1/6 of the North American continent is covered in prairie.
During the Last Glacial Maximum, an ice sheet covered most of North America from Texas to Alaska. This ice sheet was part of the Laurentide Ice Sheet, which extended over much of Canada and parts of the northern United States during the peak of the last ice age.
Yes, during the peak of the last ice age, North America was covered by a continental glacier. This massive ice sheet extended as far south as present-day Illinois and New York and shaped much of the landscape we see today.
30%
Wolves used to exist throughout much of North America. Their population today is far decreased from the range it once covered.
Im pretty sure it was glaciersglaciers
During the ice age, which peaked around 20,000 years ago, about 30% of Earth's surface was covered in ice. This ice covered large parts of North America, Europe, and Asia, forming massive ice sheets and glaciers that shaped the landscape we see today.
During the last ice age, much of North America was covered in thick sheets of ice.
Much of the northern part of North America is covered with snow during the winter, but for more southern parts of the continent, snow can be very rare. See the Related links for a link to the Rutgers Global Snow Lab, which offers a variety of snow cover charts including daily snow cover and snow cover anomalies.
Chile
Western
It shaped much of New England. Huge amounts of gravel were pushed around, creating Long Island. It covered Canada under thousands of feet of ice.