There is concrete evidence that the Southern Ocean that surrounds Antarctica is getting warmer. This warmth is causing the ice shelves to deteriorate from underneath.
According to the British Antarctic Survey, warming is also evident in the Antarctic Peninsula:
"A total increase in mean annual air temperatures, of around 2.8 °C makes this the most rapidly warming region in the Southern Hemisphere - comparable to rapidly warming regions of the Arctic."
The temperature rises when the sun comes up, and may reach 10 to 20 degrees below zero -- which is warmer than the temperatures when there is no sun.
In the classic sense, however, Antarctica is never 'warm'.
Antarctica is always very cold, regardless of season. The highest temperature ever recorded in Antarctica was 3 degrees Fahrenheit. Summer temperatures generally range from -4 to -80 degrees Fahrenheit.
The summer temperatures in Antarctica are not warm enough to melt the ice sheet.
winter and summer
In summer, they bathe in the cold water to cool off, and in winter their fur helps keep them warm.
Microfiber is made for warmth. How can any "blanket" cool you anyway. Summer is not cool to begin with.
Cool and wet in the winter and warm in the summer
It's never 'hot' in Antarctica, however, in summer, the temperatures can warm up to zero degrees F.
Oceans warm the land near the coast in winter, and cool it in summer. Oceans cover over 71 percent of the planet.
equator
keeps it cool in summer and warm in winter
warm in the summer and cool in the winter.
In the north its cold in the winter cool in warm in the summer. In the west its warm in the winter but in some places cold and warm in the summer but some places are cool. In the east it is warm in the summers and cool or cold in the winter. In the south its hot in the summer and cool in the winter. It depends on what the overall climate is for the world to.
Antarctica's average temperature is the coldest on earth. You don't state your winter temperatures, but summer temperatures in Antarctica can rise -- in some places -- to almost zero degrees F. The summer temperature on the Antarctic Peninsula can be warm-ish, in the upper 30 or 40 degrees F.