Your answer depends on your starting point.
You may be thinking of the Trans-Antarctica mountain range.
You'll find both there. Some scientists ski, and there is some cross-country skiing in Antarctica. Some cross-country skiers in Antarctica are not scientists.
Yes. Since they had to cross the Southern Ocean, they needed special equipment to contend with the cold as they approached Antarctica.
he want to cross antarctica
You may be thinking of the Trans-Antarctic mountains.
The Antarctic Circle crosses Antarctica.
The Prime Meridian crosses Europe, Africa, and Antarctica. It passes through the United Kingdom, France, Spain, Algeria, Mali, and Ghana before reaching Antarctica.
Depending on where you start out from, you could cross at least one or more of the seas of the world, and at least, you would cross the Southern Ocean, which surrounds the continent.
Your answer depends on your starting point. But all expeditions sailing to Antarctica eventually cross the Southern Ocean, which surrounds the continent.
The term Antarctic is useful to describe the area of the earth south of 60 degrees South Latitude, which includes the continent of Antarctica.
None. You would travel across the Southern Ocean to get from Africa to Antarctica.
Robert Falcon Scott did not cross Antarctica. They trekked from McMurdo Sound to the South Pole and died on their return. The march began 1 November 1911, and Scott died sometime during the last week of March 1912.