Generally, November through March or April.
Another Answer
Depending on the type of science being researched, and the location of the research sites, options are open from a window that spans October 1 to about mid-February at McMurdo Station, with the South Pole options being smaller-- November, December and January. There are locations on the Antarctic Peninsula when the research options may remain open until mid-March.
What's important to know is this: not all research is done by scientists. There are people who work in support of science, who monitor scientific data gathering on the Antarctic continent 12 months every year.
The continent of Antarctica is only accessible between about October and about February. Scientists work in Antarctica temporarily for three to six-week periods when access is available.
Generally, scientific work takes place in Antarctica between October and February.
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People who live in Antarctica for one year are generally workers paid by their governments to support the work of scientists involved with the study of the health of planet earth.
If by 'researchers' you mean 'scientists or those in support of science', the answer is that these people live and work in Antarctica every day of the year. Their assignments, however, are temporary.
Since Antarctica is in the southern hemisphere, spring begins about October 1 each year. Scientists begin arriving about that time and work in the Antarctic until about the end of February each year.
Penguins are sea birds and live at sea. For about two months each year, Emperor and Adelie penguins come to Antarctica's beaches to breed.
No animals live in Antarctica: it's too cold to maintain any kind of life or food chain. Some marine animals and birds come to Antarctica to breed, otherwise, their locations are a mystery: scientists continue to study where these animals live the rest of the year.
improve at bottom The only animals that live in Antarctica are marine animals and they are the whales and penguins and some dolphins pass through the circle. The only people that live in Antarctica are scientists and they only live there for half a year at most. improve: scientist live there and they can only live there for 12 months and then need a 2 month break after that they can continue to live there for another 12 months and then have another 2 months break and so on and so on also animals live there which are; whale seal fish krill crab phytoplankton and other invertebrates. if all or the invertebrates died then all life forms living in the world in the ocean would ether become cannibals or die![sadly] Spell CheckNo spelling errors were found!
No. Traffic to and from Antarctica is limited to seasons when there is no ice surrounding the continent -- for ships, and when it is not so cold as to freeze fuel and hydraulic systems in aircraft.
There is no permanent population in Antarctica. It is a continent, not a country. Antarctica is far too hostile for humans to live all year around. There are however research facilities and similar structures in the Antarctica, which are operated by people (mainly scientists) from all over the world. So they all celebrate the traditional celebrations of their country of origin. Antarctica itself has no holidays.
Actually, summer lasts for three months in Antarctica and begins on December 21 each year.
Sir Edmund Hilary would be able to live in Antarctica for one year, as many people do.
Yes. It occurs every year in Antarctica. Antarctica experiences months of continuous daylight, and then months of continuous night.
Year around, scientists and people who support science, study the health of planet earth.