No, the Arctic is not a continent. The Arctic used to be a continent, however, it split. Today, the Arctic is an ocean, named for the continent that used to be where it lies today, at the northern portion of the Earth.
In this context, Antarctica is a continent; there is no continent in the Arctic, specifically at the poles: 90 degrees.
No, The North Pole is a point in the Arctic Ocean, and the South Pole is a point on the continent of Antarctica.
The Arctic Ocean, the North Pole, the Arctic Circle.
The North Pole is not on any continent. It is an imaginary point on the Earth's surface that can be reached by travelling over the Arctic Ice Sheet, which forms on the surface of the Arctic Sea.
asia
There is only one continent in your query: Antarctica. There is no continent in the Arctic -- it is open ocean.
In this context, Antarctica is a continent; there is no continent in the Arctic, specifically at the poles: 90 degrees.
The Arctic has no land, so is not a continent. Antarctica IS a continent.
No, but Antarctica is.
the artic is not a continent
Antarctica is the only continent with no forest.
No, in the Arctic there is nothing but sea under the ice cap.
Nobody owns the land, meaning that is not part of any continent.
It's not on a continent-it's in the middle of the Arctic Ocean.
arctic
Australian Arctic
The Arctic Ocean is above North America, Europe, and Asia.