Yes, there are.
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No land animals live in Antarctica: it's too cold to support life or any kind of food chain.
Land on any continent is hard, and Antarctica is a continent.
no one owns any land in Antarctica
Yes there is
No. To this day, no one and no nation 'owns' land in Antarctica.
No country owns any land in Antarctica, but Australia claims the most territory.
Any of the world's main continuous expanses of land (Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, South America)
The Antarctic Circle crosses waters of the Southern Ocean, and land of Antarctica.No point of it is on any part of any country.
Any of the world's main continuous expanses of land (Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, South America).
Antarctica and Australia do not touch any other land.
Saturn does not have any land features because it does not have any land; Saturn is a gas giant, a planet made of gases and high-pressure liquids.
There are no land-based animals in Antarctica: it's too cold to support any kind of food chain.
Nothing grows in Antarctica: it's too cold to support any life.
There are no native animals in Antarctica. You could consider the humans who work and live on the continent on a temporary basis, land animals.
The definition for the word continent is "any of the world's main continuous expanses of land (Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, South America)."
No animals live in Antarctica: it's too cold to support animal life or any food chain.
There are no land animals on Antarctica. The only danger to the sea life in the Southern Ocean that surrounds Antarctica is the natural danger afforded in any animal that is part of any food chain.
No fox lives in Antarctica. Antarctica is too cold to support animal life of any kind, and there is no land-based food chain there.
Antarctica is not near any state. It is about 750 miles south of the nearest land -- the tip of South America. Antarctica is surrounded by the Southern Ocean.
No nation claims the South Pole- or any land in Antarctica. That is contrary to the international treaty on Antarctica.
No bears or land animals of any kind live on Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain.
No. Neptune is a gas giant, it has no land or surface.
Yes, yes indeed.
The Antarctic Treaty precludes any commercial mining on land south of 60 degrees S, which includes Antarctica.
There are no plats on the Antarctic continent, because none of the land is owned.