You can see the moon there for half a month when the moon is crescent. Yes, the moon can be visible in Antarctica when it is at it's zenith from a location in the southern hemisphere.
Like every continent, Antarctica gets light from the sun, the moon and the stars.
Antarctica's surface is similar to that of the moon in that it is rocky.
The 'light of day' in Antarctica can come from the sun, the moon, and the southern hemisphere of stars that surround planet earth.
365 days
a desert is anything without vegetation like Antarctica so the moon is like a desert because there is no water and no vegetation
It's a small island close to Antarctica - with a large colony of penguins.
Moon, Desert, Mountaintop, Antarctica, A Prison Cell
The Moon. On Earth, most likely Antarctica.
24 hours, then the moon also stays up for 24 hours.
The moon is made of basalt rock. Basalt rock is igneous, dark colored, and fine grained. Similar rock can be found in Antarctica and Hawaii.
Sources of brightness can be the sun, the moon and the southern hemisphere of stars. The brightness lasts 12 months out of every year. Under each of these light sources, Antarctica is 'bright' enough to navigate out of doors.