and igloo is made of two elemets frozen snow that we call ice and unfrozen snow what we call snow
An igloo assumes humans: there is no native population on the Antarctic continent. Any igloo built there was built as a survival shelter by humans probably learning how to build them for survival.
early 1800's
A igloo is both permanent and temporary. It depends on how it is built.
It is called an igloo....
An Eskimo's snow-built shelter is called an Igloo. This is not an Eskimo's "home" - they live in houses.
When we got to the edge of the frozen lake, we built an igloo to protect us from the wind.
early 1800's
There are no indigenous people in Antarctica: igloos are built by humans. Any igloo in Antarctica is probably built by a knowledgeable extreme cold weather survivor team there to support science.
Because they had lots of spare ice to use.
it is more easy to build
"Igloo" is not a language. It is a type of shelter typically built by the Inuit and other indigenous peoples in the Arctic regions using blocks of snow or ice.
One type of house built in cold regions is the igloo which is usually built with snow and ice. Another type built to withstand cold climates, are houses with steep-pitched roofs, good insulation, and double glazed or thermal windows.