Igloos can be found in the Arctic, where people build them to keep them warm. Supposedly Santa has a giant igloo that is warmed inside, and the elves have put dirt all over the ground, and have planted seeds to grow vegetables.
Alaska does not have any igloos made entirely out of ice. Hunters sometimes build them as temporary shelters on the ice pack. Some or the homes of the homes of the native peoples are called igloos. They are dug out of the ground. They have roofs made of branches. They are out in the wilderness. Generally, they live in regular houses with lots of insulation.
Igloos are homes made of compressed snow or ice, that are found in northern Canada, Alaska, and other regions populated by Inuit/Eskimo people.
In the Arctic, where there is a deep field of snow.
In northern Cananda and Alaska is where igloos are commonly found. The native Indians in those areas created them as shelter. Northern Europe usually makes shelters out of reindeer hides.
alaska
Igloos are found in more than one place in the world, far to the North Pole and far to the South Pole. the first cizilization to make igloos were the Esquimaux's.
There are no igloos in Switzerland.
They melt.
Northern Canada.
They melt.
Igloos are still sometimes found in the far north. Native peoples still ocassionally build them as hunting and fishing shelters.
a polo bear
Penguins are only found near the South Pole, Igloos are only built near the North Pole.
Igloos are homes made of compressed snow or ice, that are found in northern Canada, Alaska, and other regions populated by Inuit/Eskimo people.
In Greenland, Iceland and other countries that are further from the equated line of the earth.
They do not make igloos. Inuit and Eskimos make igloos, not polar bears.
No, igloos can not be moved.