You are moving closer to the South Pole.
North of course! There is no other way to travel.
If you are standing precisely at the South pole, you can only travel north.
You travel south.
I believe this is correct: Theoretically, the axis is infinitely long, extending into space toward the north from the north pole, and toward the south from the south pole. When you reach the north pole, that is not the farthest north that you can travel; if you are able to go up, you will continue going north.
Once you've reached the south pole, you can only move away from the pole. And since you are moving away from the south pole you can't be traveling south. Aha! But you CAN travel south from the south pole. It's just that you will need a space ship to do it. We do not have two poles, called 'north' and 'south'. The pole is one line that continues indefinitely in a straight line, up from both 'poles' on the globe, as we call them for convenience. Hop in your ship, set your course along the pole, and fly south for ever.
Except near the Earth's magnetic poles, the south pole of a compass points toward the south.
South.
At the South Pole, every direction is north. That's because the South Pole is located at the southernmost point on Earth, and all lines of longitude meet there. This means that no matter which way you go from the South Pole, you are always travelling north.
south pole
North is the direction toward the North Pole or geographic North.
magnetic north north pole =magnetic south
from anywhere on a map south is the direction towards the south pole.