Like an Ice Cream Sandwich That Never Melts
Imagine you have an ice cream sandwich. You put it in the freezer, and it stays cold no matter how hot it gets outside. Permafrost is like that ice cream sandwich under the ground.
In places with permafrost, like Alaska or Siberia, the ground is frozen all year round, even during summer! It's like having a giant ice cake buried deep inside the Earth, keeping everything around it chilly.
What Happens When It Thaws?
If the weather gets warmer for a long time, the ice in the permafrost can start to melt. That’s like taking your ice cream sandwich out of the freezer, it starts to get soft and squishy. This melting ground can make things wobbly or even sink, just like how an ice cream sandwich might look messy if it melts too much!
Examples
- Imagine having a fridge that never turns off, that's permafrost.
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See also
- Permafrost: What is it and why is it so important?
- How Does Reshaping the Earth’s Surface Affect Climate?
- How Does Permafrost Is Not What You Think It Is Work?
- When a Tiny Land Bridge Triggered an Ice Age?
- What happens when the permafrost thaws? | BBC Ideas?