the artic ocean has the most ice burgs
No. Because in the artic ocean there are ice bergs. The titanic was sailing in the ocean and hit an ice berg.
the Arctic ocean
the Arctic
ice bergs
By definition, icebergs float in the Southern Ocean, having broken off the Antarctic ice sheet. Some identify these bergs with names -- especially the larger bergs. You can learn more about how the large bergs are named, below.
It may have a core comprising an ocean of liquid diamond, with diamond "ice"-bergs floating in it.
well ice bergs fall of glasures like from Iceland and follows the curant
the most popular region is where the big ice bergs are <3
Ice is less dense than water, so it floats in water (with about 1/8 floating above the surface).
Because if all ice bergs around Greenland were to melt then it would increase the global ocean level by hundreds of meters. Major cities such as New york, Washington and London would all be under water.
nothing
An ice shelf is a floating extension of a continental ice sheet, which means generally the only place you find them is in Antarctica. When ice breaks off this ice shelf, which is adjacent to ocean water, it becomes a chunk of (freshwater) ice and floats off to its death. This is an ice berg. Ice bergs refer to any ice in the ocean that has broken off from glaciers, so it doesn't necessarily have to break off an ice shelf. Ice bergs are separate from sea ice, however, which forms from sea water that freezes.