Yes, it could.
No, icebergs are found at sea, not in a desert. However, some icebergs form from glaciers and ice sheets in the Antarctic Desert.
No. Cozumel is 4760 kilometers (2958 miles) south of the Arctic circle, where icebergs are commonly found.
Icebergs are a type of lanform that is not found in the desert.
in history books, frozen in icebergs
icebergs and reefs
I think that all continents have had an iceberg at some point in their history. The icebergs move at an amazing pace so they could go anywhere that wasn't to hot.
Britain's coastline is not scattered with icebergs because the country is located in a temperate climate zone where icebergs are not typically found. Icebergs are more commonly found in polar regions where glaciers calve into the sea, such as in the Arctic or Antarctic. Additionally, the Gulf Stream helps to keep the waters around Britain relatively warm, preventing the formation and presence of icebergs.
Icebergs are primarily found near the poles because they originate from glaciers, which form in cold regions where snow accumulates and compacts over time. The frigid temperatures near the poles facilitate the process of glacier formation and the calving of icebergs into the ocean. Additionally, the warmer waters away from the poles can cause icebergs to melt rapidly, limiting their presence in more temperate regions. Thus, the polar environment is essential for the stability and existence of icebergs.
They learned that even "unsinkable" ships are not impervious to icebergs.
Icebergs have been naturally occurring longer than there have been humans. So the first human to see an iceberg was simply the first human that made it far enough north into the natural range of icebergs. And that's too far back in history for us who know who it was.
No. Those are found on the polar circles, and Mexico is nowhere near any of them.
tescos in the freezer section yea really funny