any of them.. i guess
There is a few airlines that fly Islip Airport. This is a national airport.
Dependent on where you want to land in Antarctica, you can fly from Portland to New Zealand, Australia, Chile, Argentina, South Africa or India, and from there travel according to your expedition's plan. There is no commercial air service to anywhere on the Antarctic continent.
There is only 1 airport in Nice, which Easyjet does fly to.
600,000 people fly to the Antarctica everyday. 35% are scientist.
If you could fly in a straight line, like a bird, according to Google Maps, you'd fly 9,106.596 miles to fly from London to the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula. The length of your trip, then, would depend on how fast you could fly. There are no commercial flights to and from Antarctica, so you could fly from London to any southern airport -- Chile, Argentina, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand -- and charter an airplane to take you to the continent.
You can fly into Flagstaff Airport if going to the Grand Canyon
it takes about for a fly about half a year
You are over Antarctica in an airplane, probably.
No
A fly that lives on Antarctica
When traveling to Iceland, you would typically fly into Keflavik International Airport, which is the main international airport serving the country.
When traveling to Iceland, you should fly into Keflavik International Airport, which is the main international airport serving the country.