You can find the South Pole on the continent of Antarctica, 98% of which is covered with an ice sheet. This leaves two percent of the continental land that is not covered with ice.
No, but 98% of the continent of Antarctica is covered by its ice sheet.
Antarctica is land covered by ice while the Arctic is just a solid piece of ice. the statement above is...WRONG!! The arctic is mostly land. Yes it has ice, but mostly land. The antarctic is 98 percent ICE. So really nethir are "completely" ice, but antarctica is the winner.
Greenland is an island and Antarctica is a continent, both covered with ice sheets.
98% of Antarctica is covered in a sheet of ice which means that only 2% is uncovered. :-)
97% of Antarctica is covered by ice!!!
Ninety-eight percent of the continent is covered with an ice sheet.
One hundred percent of Antarctica is land. The continent is about 98% covered by ice.
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.
Bare land in Antarctica is about two percent.
98% of the land is covered with a continental ice sheet.
0.4 percent is not covered by ice on average between 0.4 - 2.5
About two percent of the continent is ice-free.
If your question has to do with ice, the answer is two percent of the Antarctic continent is not covered by an ice sheet.
Ninety-eight percent of Antarctica is covered with an ice sheet, only a small part of Antarctica -- the Antarctic Peninsula -- receives any snow at all.
Ninety-eight percent of Antarctica is covered with an ice sheet.
Ninety-eight percent of Antarctica is covered with an ice sheet -- it is not known for its waterways.