All of the snow in Antarctica -- is snow in Antarctica.
no, not in the summer
Antarctic snow can vary in depth, with some areas having several meters of snow accumulation. In the interior regions of Antarctica, snow depth can reach over 4 meters due to continuous snowfall and limited melting. However, coastal areas may have shallower snow cover due to wind erosion and sublimation.
Snow accumulates year after year in regions closer to the North and South Poles, such as the Arctic and Antarctic regions. These areas have prolonged cold temperatures that help maintain snow cover throughout the year. Additionally, high-altitude mountain ranges and some subarctic regions also experience consistent snow accumulation.
To calculate **40 percent** of any quantity, you multiply the quantity by **0.40**. However, "40 percent of snow" is not a complete question, as you need a specific amount of snow (such as 40% of 10 inches of snow). Here's the general formula: [ \text{40 percent of a quantity} = \text{Quantity} \times 0.40 ] For example: If you have 10 inches of snow, 40% of 10 inches is: [ 10 \times 0.40 = 4 \text{ inches of snow} ] Let me know if you have a specific amount of snow in mind, and I can Click Here : ln.run/1Qu1h
Generally, in Antarctica, it's too cold to rain. Precipitation in the Antarctic Peninsula may fall as rain, but the amounts are nominal. Other precipitation on the continent may fall as snow or ice crystals. Average humidity on the continent is about five percent.
Ninety-eight percent of the Antarctic continent is covered with an ice sheet.
Ninety-eight percent of Antarctica is covered with an ice sheet, only a small part of Antarctica -- the Antarctic Peninsula -- receives any snow at all.
About 98% of the Antarctic continent is covered with its ice sheet. There is no snow in Antarctica, it's too cold and dry.
There is only about five percent humidity in Antarctica. Sometimes it does rain in the far north end of the Antarctic peninsula. 'Snow' is really blowing ice crystals and not snow at all.
One hundred percent of the ice...in the Antarctic, is ice in the Antarctic.
Ninety-eight percent of the Antarctic continent is covered by an ice sheet. The remaining two percent is either beach or arid, mountainous land.
no, not in the summer
No
The amount of ice is about 90% of the earth's store of ice, and covers 98% of the Antarctic continent.
definitely not you idiot
Ninety-eight percent of the Antarctic continent is covered by an ice sheet.
Zero. It's too cold and dry in the Antarctic interior to snow.