Well it depends what time of the year and are you talking AT THE POLES or in the polar region. In the ANTARCTIC region or the south pole NOBODY lives there during the year except for two to three months during summer when the temperature reaches about negative thirty degrees celcius and the only time of the year when it is actually livable. In the ARCTIC region or the poles again nobody permanently lives at the north pole (except eskimos) because of the temperature but typically speaking Greenland and some parts of Canada and those islands and countries are in the arctic region and have a permanent population.
WHAT ARE YOU ON ABOUT LOOK UP the inuit or eskimos
BY THE WAY TRY SPELLING REGIONS WITH AN R "DAVO.33"
I once lived in a glacial snow cave for a week, but usually there is nothing living on a glacier for there is no food supply. Occasionally alpine grasshoppers are found adventitiously, but that's about all apart from passing mountaineers and chamois.
In order to live on ice, there must be some dirt on top of the ice or in a crack. Plant life is impossible on clean ice.
Animals such as penguins, polar bears, and seals live on ice.
All of the Earth's ice!
vien jade
Nonliving
No, nothing grows on ice caps.
Dry ice is frozen Carbon Dioxide. This solid "sublimates"; it turns into a gas without being a liquid at all. So no. You can't get wet dry ice.
Yes it can. What you put it in determines the shape. If you are talking about mold that grows on things then no it can't. Mold cannot survive tempratures under 0 degrees.
toes
yeast
No, nothing grows on ice caps.
none
As water in the crack turns into ice, the ice expands and may widen the crack, even splitting the rock.
tundra and ice
Spinach is a vegetable that grows from the earth, Ice Cream is made combining cream, milk, sugars, flavoring etc.
he loves his dogs so he gets on the ice and gets little ann off the ice.
gymnastics,dance,ice skating, track,cheerleading= she has a lot she wants to be an athlete when she grows up!
Ice, water under the ice :) The thing to also know is that Artica grows and shrinks twice its size every year. Also, there is a lot of Relief in both of these poles :)
On earth, yes it is. Dry ice is a result of decompressed liquid CO2. Liquid CO2 requires a much higher compressed atmosphere. P.S. I hear it grows naturally on Mars.
Dry ice is frozen Carbon Dioxide. This solid "sublimates"; it turns into a gas without being a liquid at all. So no. You can't get wet dry ice.
convection it send out electrons which produce magnitic wave that grows in a transfer of two integers colliding together that are connected
A