no. but most of earths fresh water is.
Frozen in the icecaps (in the form of ice at the poles).
Greenland has the most frozen water. Greenland has the most frozen water.
Mostly in Antarctica. 3% of the world's water is FRESH water. But, therefore, ONLY 1% of it is actually drinkable. Fresh water is stored in the glaciers of Antarctica, Greenland etc, icebergs, shallow ground water, and lakes and rivers.
Most of the Earth's fresh water is locked up in glaciers and ice caps at the polar regions. This frozen water plays a crucial role in regulating global climate and sea levels.
Because it is mainly frozen in glaciers... we can only use 0.04% of the 3% of freshwater that is on Earth.
NO. not at all. most are in the pacific, surrounding the Ring Of Fire
Ice or snow, due to the colder temperatures in polar regions. This frozen water can be found in glaciers, ice caps, and icebergs.
Salt Water
Solid Water can be found in Icebergs, because an iceberg is truly solid water because it is just frozen water. Most Icebergs can be found in Greenland and Antarctica.
Salt Water
Frozen water (ice) is less dense than liquid water, which is why it floats. When water freezes, its molecules form a crystalline structure that causes it to expand, unlike most liquids that contract when they freeze. This expansion is why ice floats on water.
the ocean