this means that the polar bears habitat is melting because of global warming and climate change. other ways: the ice is melting because of climate change and global warming this means that polar bears are being extinct.
Icebergs melting adds fresh water to the oceans. Icebergs are floating already, so when they melt they do not cause a rise in sea levels. Glaciers and land ice, like the Greenland ice-cap, and any ice on Antarctica, do cause a rise in sea levels when they melt.
melting ice is 10 degrees
ice is melting in a large number ... but not so fast
The melting point of ice actually DECREASES with an INCREASE in pressure.
Global warming is on the rise again and the ice caps are melting rapidly.
An ice cap is ice over land. There is no ice cap in the Arctic. Arctic sea ice is melting, however, more and more each year, and this is threatening the existence of the polar bears who rely on the habitat of sea ice to build up their store of body fat to last them through the (lengthening) summers.
It looks like snow!
it has affected the lithosphere because of ice cap melting and floods
yes it is and good luck from deney12345
The Polar bear gets in real trouble if the ice cap disappeared.
Melting ice turns the ice into water.
They are both ice and they may both be melting. But the iceberg is already displacing water, so by melting does little to raise the sea level. When a glacier melts, the additional water does raise the sea level somewhat. This would be particularly true when major ice caps such as the Greenland ice cap, melt.
this means that the polar bears habitat is melting because of global warming and climate change. other ways: the ice is melting because of climate change and global warming this means that polar bears are being extinct.
The sea ice in the Arctic is not called an ice cap, which is ice that lies on land, like Greenland and Antarctica. Greenland's ice cap, and the glaciers formed where the ice meets the sea, have been melting at an increasing rate every year. Recent data showed an annual melting of 195 cubic kilometers (47 cubic miles). East Antarctica is not showing much change, but West Antarctica, especially the peninsula, is warming, its glaciers are melting and its ice shelves, undermined by the warming ocean, are breaking off and floating off as icebergs.
melting ice a physical change
Antarctica is a continent, and continents do not melt. However, the ice shelves attached to 44% of the continent are disintegrating, due to the warming of the Southern Ocean. The ice sheet that covers 98% of the continent melts and freezes cyclically.