You would easily find them in the North and South pole.
Antarctica is a desert, the largest desert on earth, and has many icebergs surrounding it.
You would look in either the 2300s or the 500s. Not fiction.
Glaciers and icebergs
Icebergs can be located in the nearby vicinity of South Africa.
in the sea. Icebergs are broken pieces of glaciers which float out to sea.
A glaciologist or a polar scientist would study icebergs. These scientists typically analyze the formation, movement, and impact of icebergs on the environment and climate. Their research can provide insights into climate change and sea level rise.
No, icebergs are found at sea, not in a desert. However, some icebergs form from glaciers and ice sheets in the Antarctic Desert.
Icebergs are already melting, but they only add very slightly to sea level rise (Icebergs are fresh water, which is slightly less dense than sea water).
If icebergs didn't float, they would sink to the bottom of the ocean. This could disrupt ocean currents, marine life habitats, and ultimately impact global climate patterns. Additionally, the loss of floating icebergs would lead to higher sea levels, posing a threat to coastal communities.
arctic sea
There are no icebergs in Australia.
A polar ice cap is a highhttp://wiki.answers.com/wiki/High_latitude region of a Planetor Natural_satellitethat is covered in Icece