The ice sheet holds 100% of Antarctica's . . . ice sheet.
The Antarctic ice sheet contains about 90% of earth's ice.
Nope...lots of land, even unfrozen lakes, under the ice. Basically, Antarctica is a small continent (say the size of Australia) covered by a sheet of ice...and now it's shrinking. no, underneath the ice is rocky land Edited by Danielle Robertson 5/3/2009 :P
There are two main ice sheets on Earth: the Greenland Ice Sheet located in Greenland and the Antarctic Ice Sheet situated in Antarctica. These ice sheets hold the majority of the world's fresh water in the form of ice.
No, but 98% of the continent of Antarctica is covered by its ice sheet.
Less than 1% of Antarctica is not covered in ice, mainly in areas such as the Dry Valleys and some exposed rock areas along the coast. The vast majority of Antarctica is covered by a thick ice sheet that averages about 1 mile (1.6 km) in thickness.
Antarctica's ice sheet holds about 90% of the earth's ice.
Antarctica's ice sheet holds about 90% of the earth's store of permanent ice.
If your question has to do with ice, the answer is two percent of the Antarctic continent is not covered by an ice sheet.
The number you want is about 90%.
yes ice in the antarctica shrink
One hundred percent of Antarctica is, and only about two percent of the continent is not covered by its ice sheet.
Antarctica's ice sheet represents about 90% of the earth's ice.
Ice in the ice sheet that covers Antarctica is free of any minerals.
The largest ice in Antarctica is the ice sheet that covers 98% of the continent.
Antarctica is a continent, 98% of which is covered by an ice sheet.
No. Ice sits on top of Antarctica -- 98% of the continent is covered with an ice sheet.
One hundred percent of the ice in Antarctica is ice.