Icebergs float north until they melt completely.
About 216 degrees
No. White foxes live in the far north. There are no foxes in Antarctica
When a human sailed far south enough to sight land before being turned back by the icebergs and cold weather.
The two climates are not the same. Antarctica is far colder than North America, as is the Arctic. Antarctica is about 30 degrees F colder than the Arctic.
Icebergs. Australia lies north of the Antarctic, so if one sailed directly south far enough, one might hit floating icebergs.
Your answer depends on the part of America which is your beginning point -- North, Central or South America, and which part of Antarctica is your destination.
Parts of the Antarctic peninsula are far enough north that it rains there.
Icebergs have been naturally occurring longer than there have been humans. So the first human to see an iceberg was simply the first human that made it far enough north into the natural range of icebergs. And that's too far back in history for us who know who it was.
Icebergs have been naturally occurring longer than there have been humans. So the first human to see an iceberg was simply the first human that made it far enough north into the natural range of icebergs. And that's too far back in history for us who know who it was.
Alaska. Antarctica is about 30 degrees F colder than its northern polar counterparts. Alaska is not as far north as Antarctica is south, so it is clearly much warmer than Antarctica.
No, but Norway has claimed part of Antarctica. Norway crosses the ARCTIC circle, i.e. it's close to the NORTH pole while the SOUTH pole lies in the middle of Antarctica - so not only is not not near Antarctica, it's about as far from it as you can get!
Major populations of penguins are found in: Antarctica, Argentina, Australia, Chile, New Zealand, and South Africa. Some live as far north as the Galápagos Islands.
As far as we know, Antarctica is the only continent without pumpkins (and most other plants). It is possible that some are grown experimentally at the scientific stations.