None. You would travel across the Southern Ocean to get from Africa to Antarctica.
To travel from Africa to Antarctica, you would typically cross the continents of Africa, Europe (if your flight path takes you through European airspace), and then to Antarctica.
Nomads are known to have traveled across various continents, including Asia, Africa, Europe, and North America. The specific continents would depend on the nomadic group and their historical movements.
South America and Africa are the two continents where the landmass narrows as you travel south. This narrowing can be observed in the shape of the continents where the width decreases as you move closer to the southern tips of South America and Africa.
Africa and Asia
If you travel directly east from the contiguous US, you would reach Europe and Africa.
explan the compactness of continent
Antarctica is one of the seven continents on earth. People are motivated to travel to Antarctica for the same reasons they are motivated to travel to the other destinations.
It is shorter to travel from Africa to South America.
When you travel south from South Africa, you will reach the continent of Antarctica.
Africa and the Americas
southwest
You travel to Antarctica by air or by ship.
Both. They traveled by land when they were on land, and by sea when traveling across continents, like to the colonies.
you can not walk to Africa from England because in between the two continents are seas and oceans . the other reason is they are far apart for u to travel by foot.
they travel by boat or they could travel by walking
Your answer depends on your Antarctic destination. You can fly commercially to New Zealand, Australia, Chile, Argentina, even South Africa. Then charter your transport to Antarctica. There is no commercial air service to anywhere on Antarctica.
You would travel south, regardless of where on the equator you began your journey.
The fossils of animals were found the three different continents, but no animal could've swam that far across the salt water, so there had to be another way. Also, the plant fossil glossopteris was discovered in Antarctica, where no plants could live.