pacific
No, Greenland is not always covered by ice. It experiences seasonal variation in ice coverage, with the majority of the island covered by ice year-round, but in the summer months, some of the ice does melt.
It was not exactly covered in all ice, parts we covered in snow and the whole earth was not all land, parts were water
Artic
Yes there was an ice age that coverd all of the wold.
because when it has no ice its all green
All of it is ice covered except for the coast, in general, and especially the coast on the southeast and southwest sides.
Antarctica is covered by an ice sheet -- about 90% of the world's ice. There is very little snow: it's too cold and dry.
The countries most affected during the last glaciation were those countries which still experience snow and ice during the winter. That is most of the North American continent, most of Europe and Scandinavia, Russia, northern China and Japan.
About 98% of the continent is covered with ice.
The south pole in Antarctica is heavily covered in glaciers, so all you have is ice. The north pole in the Arctic sea is also covered with ice for part of the year, but the ice melts in the warmer seasons. Greenland, which is also close to the pole, remains glaciated although there is melting taking place.
Approximately 98% of Antarctica's surface is covered in ice.