None. No nation owns any part of Antarctica.
Britain and other countries claim territories on the continent, and several other claims overlap the British claim. The British claim reaches between 20°W and 80°W. It is overlapped by claims by Chile and Argentina. All claims are pie-piece-shaped and extend south to the South Pole or 90°S.
None.
None.
Australia claims a slice of Antarctica, but does not own it. There are other claims, and no country with claims owns any part of Antarctica.
Australia does not own any part of Antarctica. No other country owns any part of Antarctica. However, Australia does have a claim on 42% of the Antarctic, which was transferred to Australia in 1935.
Australia does not own Antarctica: it is owned by no country.
there is lots of enery being used almost twice the emount in britain!
Antarctica is its own continent.
No. Britain and other countries claim Antarctic territory. These claims are held in abeyance based on the 1960 Antarctic Treaty, which also specified that no additional claims could be made on the continent.
Antarctica is its own continent.
Antarctica is its own continent and contains no other.
Argentina owns zero in Antarctica. Its claim overlaps other claims. All claims are held in abeyance by the Antarctic Treaty (1961).
France, Australia, Norway, Britain, Argentina and Chile claim territory on Antarctica.