Generally warmer.
Warmer
arctic
No, just the opposite. Antarctica is a continent surrounded by the Southern Ocean and is about 30 degrees F colder than the Arctic, which is ocean water surrounded by continents.
The Antarctic regions are about 30 degrees F. colder than the Arctic regions, because of the Antarctic continent, the land mass that makes up about 10% of the earth's surface.This land mass and the ice that sits on top of it retains the cold better than the Arctic seas, which can warm, because the sun melts the ice and then warms the water.The Antarctic, on average.
Colder
It depends on the time of the year, they normally have the same range of temperatures but winter (the time it is really cold not necessarily a season) is normally longer in Antarctica.The Arctic Circle on average has a temperature of -2 degrees Fahrenheit and Antarctica has an average of -6 FahrenheitAnother AnswerUSA Today prints: "The average high temperature for the year in Antarctica is about -49 degrees F, while the average low temperature for the continent is about -56 degrees F."Antarctica is a continent and is about 30 degrees F colder than its polar counterpart in the Arctic north, which is sea water and sea ice. This is one of the reasons why humans have lived for tens of thousands of years in the Arctic, but Antarctica is uninhabitable for any native peoples or animals: it's too cold.
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.
colder
Because the colder climate rquires a warmer coat.
Overall, on average, the temperature on Antarctica -- the continent -- is colder that temperatures in the Antarctic region, since temperatures in the region may be warmer than those on the continent.
Fresh water freezes at 32 degrees F, and that may be the temperature of the ice in your freezer at home. The water in the southern Ocean contains salts and other minerals, and may remain liquid down to about 28 degrees F. So yes, the liquid water in the Southern Ocean may be colder than the ice in your freezer. The frozen fresh water that covers 98% of Antarctica, however, is at least 32 degrees F, so no, that frozen fresh water is at least the same temperature as the ice in your freezer. Any glacial melt -- running fresh water on the continent -- is warmer than 32 degrees F, or it would not be liquid.
the subarctic is colder than the tundra