Crevasse not to be confused with crevice
its acracked knee cap
a spring whose water flows from a crack in the cap rock over the aquifer
The only thing I can get from that question is that there is a hairline crack in the cap.
No animals live permanently on the Antarctic continent or in its polar ice cap.
Two, north polar ice cap and south polar ice cap , the arctic and the antarctic
Yes.Most of the Antarctic continent is covered in frozen fresh water. It forms the polar ice cap.
A crevass, I believe.
There is a polar ice cap covering about 98% of the Antarctic continent.
The Antarctic ice sheet covers 98% of the continent, contains about 90% of earth's ice and 70% of the earth's fresh water.
The Antarctic ice sheet contains about 70% of the earth's store of fresh water and about 90% of the earth's store of ice.
The ice sheet you're thinking of covers 98% of the continent.
Depending on the diamond: if baseball, it would drift into the ocean over time, since 98% of the continent is covered with ice. If a rock, it would attract sunlight when possible and melt its way deep into the ice cap.