It's not about how many layers of clothes they wear, it's how the layer is made. In Antarctica, each layer of clothing is usually several other layers stitched together to keep as much heat heat as possible. It also depends on what material is used.
During my year at South Pole Station, my outdoor clothing would be a parka, button-in liner, wool shirt, thermal underwear. The parka had a outer shell, insulating filler, inner shell - so that is 3 layers right there. The liner was also 3 layers. So there were usually 8 layers of material plus trapped air pockets between my skin and the very cold environment. It was about the same for the footwear.
You'd wear as many layers as you needed to keep warm.
You can wear as many layers as you require to keep our body warm.
You wear as many as it takes to keep you warm.
They wear ragged clothes, or nothing. Kidding, but they probably wear ragged clothes, or wear many layers.
Yes, many people live in Antarctica.
3
no native people lived in antarctica
I am pretty sure you are warmer with several layers of clothes than with one heavy jacket because the jacket only covers the top half of your body
600,000 people fly to the Antarctica everyday. 35% are scientist.
there are 567 people that go there
all of her clothes are cute. She loves layers. And she likes to shop at hollister, forever21, urban planet, and lots of others.
Potassium
1,000