No. Antarctica is a solid continent that happens to be covered in ice and snow. Even if this ice and snow was going to melt in the next dozen years - which it won't - the continent would still remain there.
About 100 million years
Some common solids that melt at around 100 degrees Celsius include butter, cocoa butter, and some types of wax.
The ice sheet holds 100% of Antarctica's . . . ice sheet.
It typically takes several hours for a block of ice to melt at room temperature, which is around 70 degrees Fahrenheit. If the temperature is warmer, such as 100 degrees Fahrenheit, the ice will likely melt faster, possibly within an hour or two depending on the size of the block.
If your map shows 100% of the earth, you can follow the compass rose to the far south and find Antarctica: look south of 60 degrees S.
About 100 million years
You could pick a number between zero degrees and 100 degrees below zero C, and be confident that it is the answer you seek. Antarctica is as large as USA and Mexico combined, with variant temperatures all over the continent, throughout the years.
Century = 100 years
In 1915, there weren't necessarily good maps of Antarctica, and none of them showed climate, only landmass.
All -- 100% -- of the people in Antarctica, are people...in Antarctica.
The Mesosaurus lived in Antarctica back 100 million to 200 million years ago : )
i think in a 100 years animal from a long time will come back and part of Antarctica will flod some states and Alaska will sink in to the ocon and the clamet will change much hootter
Antarctica is colder than Hawaii, 100% of the time.
Global warming will lead to rising sea levels, more frequent extreme weather events, and disruption of ecosystems. In Antarctica, the warming is causing ice to melt faster, leading to sea level rise globally. Melting ice also affects local wildlife such as penguins and seals, disrupting their habitats and food sources.
There are many places to find facts about life 100 years ago. You could find facts about life 100 years ago in a library.
The next Ice age can happen anywhere from 100 000 to 500 years, depending on how we react to global warming. We may never have another ice age. Technically we are in an Ice age because Antarctica and Greenland have a thick Ice sheet. However when they melt the Ice Age which we are currently in will be over. The present ice age started about 2.6 million years ago and we are living in a warm period between glaciations. If you mean "how long until the next glaciation"? That we don't know yet, if the ice nears the poles continues to melt it could be many thousands of years. Since we can't make up our minds exactly what the various causes for periods of glaciation are, we don't know.
100 Years