Snow shelters can be crafted from blocks of frozen ice crystals, which because of their low moisture content, can be handled like light-weight building blocks. The igloo design is preferred, with a dug-in 'arrival arch' crafted over the entrance to keep out the constant wind and drifting ice crystals.
Simple pointed saws are used to cut the ice bricks, with one side being slightly slanted, so as to stack the bricks toward a center opening.
yes
Saws are handy for cutting blocks of frozen snow to build an igloo as a temporary shelter in Antarctica.
Best practices dictate that you use what ever is available to fabricate a protective shelter when you need one. With a saw, you can carve bricks from the frozen surface snow and fashion an igloo.
you would need snow,animals and more snow to make Antartica.
All of the snow in Antarctica -- is snow in Antarctica.
The frozen water in Antarctica is ice, not snow.
The pink you see in Antarctica is a refraction of the available light. There is no natural 'pink snow' in Antarctica.
Dorms, tents, huts and some temporary shelters are useful in Antarctica as shelter.
Any temporary or travel shelter in Antarctica is provided by the person requiring shelter.
Snow petrels are distributed in the southern region of Antarctica.
Penguins that breed on Antarctica's beaches -- these sea birds live at sea otherwise -- huddle together for shelter.
No, but it does in Antarctica.
the snow