The ice caps at the North Pole are solid.
No. There are two polar ice caps: one around the north pole and one around the south pole.
The north pole contains the largest ice caps ;-)
Stocking caps, baseball caps, almost any hat will do.
caps
The North Pole, Greenland, and the Arctic Ocean are all examples of where ice caps are located
north
There are no claims by any country to the North Pole.
The ice caps in the North pole of Mars compose of frozen water and frozen carbon dioxide and the ice caps on the South Pole consists mainly of of frozen water.
Well....there is no land below the north pole...south has a lot of ice on top....
In relation to the question asked, (south pole = antarctic) the answer is the arctic. The north pole is located in the Arctic region, specifically the Arctic Ocean. When people use the term "The North Pole", they may mean Magnetic North or they may mean the Geographic North Pole/Terrestial North Pole. The latter two terms are the point in the northern hemisphere where the earth's axis meets the earth's surface. There is no land mass at the North Pole. It is currently covered by ice caps, which shift. Therefore there is no permanent marker of the North Pole.
In the Arctic the polar ice cap is melting, losing about 3% ice every year. In the summer of 2007, for the first time in recorded history, the North-West Passage was open for shipping.
Polar ice caps are high latitude regions that are covered in ice. Since for ice to form there has to be specific temperature ranges polar ice caps form only in very cold environments such as the North Pole (over water only), Greenland and Antarctica.