Yes.
Antarctica
No. The environment in Antarctica is the most harsh environment on earth. It is too cold to support any animal life or any kind of food chain.
All continents support life, given enough high technology. Antarctica is the only continent without "native" human life.
Antarctica is too cold to support life.
There is nothing in Antarctica that would support the life of a butterfly.
Antarctica is too cold to support any kind of animal life -- there is no food chain there.
Humans mostly inhabit Antarctica for the purpose of science. Humans want to study how life is possible under such harsh conditions.Another AnswerHumans -- scientists and people who work in support of science -- live in Antarctica temporarily to study the health of planet earth.
It's too cold to support life in Antarctica.
You find the most life around Antarctica in the great Southern Ocean in the form of marine life. The continent is too cold to support any kind of animal life.
No animals live in Antarctica: it's too cold there to support life.
No. It's too cold on Antarctica to support animal life.
No. Antarctica is too cold to support animal life and there is no food chain there.