Ice machines typically produce about 70 killograms of per hour.
Land-based ice is ice that has formed over land. A glacier is an example of land-based ice. Glaciers are common in the northern areas of Canada and the North Pole.
There is no problem: simply a statement of the amount of ice an ice machine can produce in an hour!
None of Antarctica is ice. Antarctica is 100% land. The land is covered -- about 98% -- by ice, so only two percent of the land is not covered by ice.
Ice does not increase land mass.
A building where the produce ICE CREAM
With big refrigeration units.
a glacier
a viking fond green land and ice land said the green land was Ice and could and the own was warm SO evre own would go to green land and he went to ice land insted :]
Land of Ice. but it´s often refferd as the land of Fire and ice.
Ocean Grassy land Sandy land Ice
The land of fire and ice