Very little of Antarctica's precipitation falls to the ground in the form of snow. in April, most of the continent has experienced its last sunset of the season, the wind blows constantly, and any precipitation is probably in the form of ice crystals or 'diamond dust'.
Antarctica is very, very cold. Because it has a lot of snow
All of the snow in Antarctica -- is snow in Antarctica.
No. Antactica recieves very little snow as there is very little moisture there to produce it. However, what little snow does fall there does not melt.
The frozen water in Antarctica is ice, not snow.
The pink you see in Antarctica is a refraction of the available light. There is no natural 'pink snow' in Antarctica.
Snow petrels are distributed in the southern region of Antarctica.
the snow
No, but it does in Antarctica.
No. It's too cold and there is no food chain on the continent.
Very little snow falls in Antarctica. It is known as a dry region and very windy.So it is true that only little snow falls in Antarctica
97% of Antarctica is covered by ice!!!
There is no snow to speak of in Antarctica: there's not enough humidity to produce snow. Blizzards are made up of blowing ice crystals.