No animal lives on the Antarctic continent, so there is/was nothing to hunt on land.
The Southern Ocean is home to many kinds of whales and seals, and when hunting these animals was a way of life, whalers and other hunters pursued these animals in the ocean.
men used to hunt animals and they used them for food and to make clothes out of their skin or fur
No. For one thing, there aren't a lot of animals in Antarctica to hunt.
Antarctica
Antarctica.
men hunt the elephant for there tusks
There isn't a whole lot of "they" in Antarctica to hunt, and they're nearly all scientists. Even if they were inclined to hunt, at most of the Antarctic research stations either they'd be hunting the things they're there to study, or there really isn't much of anything there TO hunt. So, pretty much no.
Men hunt orcas.
There is no commercial whaling in Antarctica: some countries hunt whales in Antarctica under the terms of The Antarctic Treaty, and purport that the animals are for scientific research.
There is no record that any human hunted fur seals in the Antarctica, because there are no fur seals there.
Captain Scott led a team of 65 men on his Terra Nova Expedition to Antarctica in 1910.
No animals are 'hunted in Antarctica', except for animals that hunt each other during breeding season, in order to feed their young.
men would hunt