Australia supports research stations on Antarctica named Casey station, Davis station, Macquarie island station and Mawson station.
You can review the site, below, to learn the names, nationalities and locations of the research stations in Antarctica.
While Antarctica is the 5th largest continent in the world, it has no permanent settlements. In other words, there are no cities. There are, on occasions, small scientific base stations with temporary inhabitants, but no long-term residents.
Casey, Mawson and Davis.
Casey, Davis and Mawson are the names of the three main research facilities supported by the Australian government.
The United States supports three research stations, all of which are permanent. They are McMurdo Station, Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station and Palmer Station. Other summer and temporary stations appear seasonally.
Antarctica is an international territory and has not countries. Several existing countries have temporary or permanent scientific bases there, but no one exercises sovereign rights there.
The names for money depend on the language of the scientific base where currency is being used. For example, in the American stations, money is called -- in English: money.
There are no rainforests in Antarctica.
These names are culturally significant to the government of India, and were never intended to precipitate cultural bias. Weird is a personal judgment, and you are the judge.
There is one desert in Antarctica - the Antarctic Desert.
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Perhaps you meant, "How many GPS stations are in Chile".