All of the snow in Antarctica -- is snow in Antarctica.
The frozen water in Antarctica is ice, not snow.
Continental glaciers cover Antarctica and most of Greenland because these are the coldest places on Earth, with temperatures that allow snow to accumulate and not melt. Over time, the accumulation of snow compacts into ice, forming massive ice sheets that spread across the land.
The pink you see in Antarctica is a refraction of the available light. There is no natural 'pink snow' in Antarctica.
The fact that it is "a phrase" suggests that it is not a sentence. It is a fragment (a noun, subject) without a verb as a predicate, e.g. "Eight inches of snow fell."
Snow petrels are distributed in the southern region of Antarctica.
The complete predicate is "fell all over the city"; the simple predicate is "fell".
No, but it does in Antarctica.
the snow
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!!!