Crossword clues for icecap
icecap
- Glacial cover
- Chilly covering
- Global warming casualty
- Alp topper
- South Pole feature
- Polar peak
- North Pole feature
- Mountain peak covering, often
- Hat for Frosty?
- Hat for Frosty the Snowman?
- Greenland feature
- Global warming concern
- Frozen polar cover
- Arctic topper
- Shrinking feature
- Polar topping
- Polar mass
- Polar expanse
- Polar concern
- Phenomenon of polar regions
- Permanently frozen covering of land
- Permanent covering of frozen water
- One of two polar opposites
- North Pole topper
- North Pole covering
- Mountaintop feature, perhaps
- Mountain peak covering
- Mountain cover, often
- Melting polar region
- Melting mass
- It's melting faster
- Greenland covering
- Greenhouse gas victim
- Glacial polar mass
- Geographical feature of Mars
- Frozen topping?
- Frozen region
- Frozen peak
- Frozen Arctic formation
- Feature of Greenland topography
- Feature of Antarctica
- Feature of a pole
- Cold-weather coat?
- Cold topping?
- Cold mountain feature
- Cold mass permanently covering the polar regions or mountain peaks
- Big white sheet
- Antarctic phenomenon
- Hangover soother?
- Polar feature
- Martian feature
- Cold pack?
- Polar buildup
- Most of the Arctic Ocean
- Greenland sight
- One in the pole position?
- Global warming panel concern
- Top-of-the-world topper
- Cold cover?
- Feature of Earth, Mars and Pluto
- Pole topper
- A mass of ice and snow that permanently covers a large area of land (e.g., the polar regions or a mountain peak)
- Small glacier
- Arctic sight
- Peak topper
- Glacier that spreads outward
- Alpine topping
- Polar covering threatened by global warming: 2 wds
- Glossy cover
- Kilimanjaro topper
- Glacial mass
- Sight in the Arctic Ocean
- Arctic feature
- Finsteraarhorn feature
- Polar sight
- One cold to walk over?
- Where huskies may be used to decorate hat
- From space, circling, this can be seen receding
- Permanent frozen polar cover
- Permanent polar cover
- Trump's enforcers limit what Pole may display
- The top parts of it could easily conceal Arctic permafrost
- The first cold before March is over in permanently cold area
- Shrinking polar feature
- Top of the world
- Arctic mass
- Pole feature
- Arctic covering
- Cold covering
- Arctic Ocean sight
- Antarctic sight
- Polar formation
- Arctic expanse
- "An Inconvenient Truth" topic
- Shrinking polar covering
- Mars feature
The Collaborative International Dictionary
icecap \ice"cap`\ ([imac]s"k[a^]p`) n. a mass of ice and snow that permanently covers a large area of land (e.g., the polar regions or a mountain peak).
Wiktionary
n. (alternative form of ice cap English)
WordNet
n. a mass of ice and snow that permanently covers a large area of land (e.g., the polar regions or a mountain peak) [syn: ice cap]
Wikipedia
An ice cap or icecap is a geographical feature.
Icecap may also refer to
- Icecap (blog), a blog skeptical of global warming
- Raleigh IceCaps, a defunct ECHL Hockey Team
- St. John's IceCaps, a team in the American Hockey League
Usage examples of "icecap".
Even after thousands of years the huge icecaps that must have formed after the saturation bombing still covered nearly a quarter of the planet.
Earth-type planet, with the usual seas, continents, polar icecaps and all the rest of it.
Their mass will cause slippages in the polar icecaps, creating the rise of oceans and tsunamis.
The steadily melting icecaps had been raising the sea level, slowly, inexorably, a few inches a year.
Though there was a suggestion of a wisp of atmosphere - a smoky blue halo encircling the planet - and though there were icecaps at either pole, the world looked neither habitable nor inviting.
The TK4 gave a beautiful performance demonstration, and about an hour and a half after leaving the safety wanigan, even allowing for reduced speed on the gradient down the side of the icecap to the flat coastal strip, we came easily into Camp Belvoir and I ran the hovercraft into its hangar, and turned smugly to Herschel.
Even at Belvoir, at the foot of the icecap, winds were somewhere over sixty, gusting up to ninety miles an hour.
The brief daylight was over, the night black and moonless, the wind getting stronger as TK4 made the long climb out of Belvoir, up to the edge of the icecap.
A layer of fat, a mixture of beef tallow and mutton tallow, covered the bowl like an icecap.
On the icecap, in the middle of a fierce storm, the machines must never be switched off, because the batteries would go dead and the lubricants in the engines would freeze up within two or three minutes.
Slight variations in the output of sunlight, the orbital motion of the planet, clouds, oceans, and polar icecaps produced climatic changes –.
The suspension system was primitive at best, and every irregularity of the icecap was instantly transmitted through the skis and wheels to the cargo bed.