Antartica. Greenland.
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.
When the ice age ended, the land once covered with ice was covered with newly exposed land and water from melting ice sheets. This led to the formation of new landscapes and ecosystems as vegetation began to grow in the previously glaciated areas.
Yes.
98% of the land is covered with a continental ice sheet.
When the ice age ended, the land that was once covered in ice was now covered in vegetation and water. This led to the formation of lakes, rivers, and forests as the glaciers retreated. The land also became suitable for habitation by various species of plants and animals.
About 80% of Greenland's land surface is covered by ice.
The Greenland ice sheet covers 80 percent of the total area of land in Greenland. It is the largest island in the world.
It was not exactly covered in all ice, parts we covered in snow and the whole earth was not all land, parts were water
Antarctica.
Only two landmasses are covered with ice sheets: Antarctica and Greenland. All other land is not so covered. The ice over the Arctic ocean covers open water.
About 98% of the continent is covered in ice.
One hundred percent of Antarctica is land. The continent is about 98% covered by ice.