No, nobody lives at the Antarctica permanently, although scientists go there for research.
It's too cold to support life in Antarctica.
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No. It's too cold on Antarctica to support animal life.
There are none. It's too cold, the permafrost is too close to the surface, and the growing seasons are much too short to be of any use to grow any crops up there. Food has to be flown in by a cargo plane for the people to actually live in Antarctica.
Mining is not permitted in Antarctica; there have never been any successful mining operations there -- it's too cold.
There were no Nomads who lived in Antarctica: Antarctica is too cold to support life or any kind of food chain.
Actually, the only people who live in Antarctica are researchers and scientists. The cold and harsh weather is too much for the average being (:
None.
Antarctica, because it is too cold for people to live there.
Antarctica is too cold to support animal life: there are no native or indigenous peoples from Antarctica.
While Alaska and Antarctica have much in common -- both being rather polar in their climates, they are not mirror images of each other. Humans have lived in Alaska for about 10,000 years: no people have ever lived in Antarctica -- the continent is too cold to support life.
No. Humans have never lived in Antarctica; it's too cold.