Depending on how you define region, your answer may be different.
However, please know that the South Pole has more land -- the continent of Antarctica.
As the south pole sits on a continent, it has to be the South Pole region.
South Pole
The South Pole sits on the Antarctic continent; the North Pole is situated in the Arctic ocean.
If you mean region in the geographical sense, the south pole is located on a continent -- Antarctica -- and the north pole is located in sea water.
south
There is snow- and ice-covered land at the south pole. There is frozen ocean at the north pole.
Your answer depends on how you define region. South of 60 degrees S latitude, you can find the continent of Antarctica, which is 10% of the Earth's surface. North of 60 degrees N latitude, you can find parts of Europe, Asia, and North America. There is no land north of 83 degrees N. If 60 degrees is your measure, then the South Pole region has more land.
The South Pole has more land around the pole. The continent of Antarctica has an average revelation above sea level of +6000 ft The North Pole is covered by floating sea ice.
north pole is much more colder than south pole believe it or not! and there are alot of different animals living in each pole! in the south pole there are penguins which live there and in the north pole there are polar bears and during the winter season, the south pole hardly receives any sunlight at all! but it is different in the north pole! you will find actuall humans living there!
The North Pole is located in the Arctic Ocean, and land surrounds the sea. The South Pole is located in Antarctica, a continent that makes up 10% of the Earth's surface. You are not specific in your language for 'region'.
No, a magnet cannot have more than 2 poles. Magnets are always dipolar, meaning they will always have a north pole and a south pole. Any region on a magnet will exhibit either north or south pole characteristics.
The South Pole has land, the North Pole does not!(To be more specific and accurate, the South Pole is not actually a continent, but is situated on the continent of Antarctica.)For more information, see 'Related links' below.