no, underneath all the ice is land, just like what we walk on today no, underneath all the ice is land, just like what we walk on today edited by Danielle Robertson 5/3/2009 no, underneath all the ice is land, just like whatwe walk on today edited by Danielle Robertson 5/3/2009
No. Just penguins and other ice creatures...
I would say no because Antarctica is just like a big piece of ice.
One hundred percent of the ice found in Antarctica is...ice...in Antarctica.
Cube is not the description most scientists use: the term is ice sheet. Antarctica's land mass is 98% covered -- by an ice sheet.
One hundred percent of the ice in Antarctica is ice.
Antarctica is normal land, 98% of it just happens to be covered with ice. The seals breed on Antarctica's beaches and enjoy sunning and resting on that ice during that season.
yes ice in the antarctica shrink
Antarctica's ice sheet represents about 90% of the earth's ice.
Antarctica's ice sheet holds about 90% of the earth's ice.
The largest ice in Antarctica is the ice sheet that covers 98% of the continent.
Ice in the ice sheet that covers Antarctica is free of any minerals.
yes, with exception that the arctic's ice is melting