Fish and water usally but lucky times some sort of ice cream not sure really but whatever
they eat fish and animals they can find
Another Answer
All consumables, including food, are imported to the continent and to the Antarctic research stations by the government that supports that station.
It is illegal to consume any animal south of 60 degrees S, per the Antarctic Treaty.
Food consumed in Antarctica is imported by the government that supports the research station where the food is prepared and consumed. Generally, this is the same food that the people in that government's country eat.
Food is imported and water is available either as melted ice or as de-salinated sea water.
All research stations prepare and serve food imported from the country supporting the station. Typically, it is food that is common in the country.
People who live and work temporarily in Antarctica eat the food that their government imports for their diets. Generally, it is the food familiar to these people in their homeland.
If there were Inuits working at one of the laboratories in Antarctica, they would eat what the rest of the research team would eat. There are few examples of canned or freeze-dried delicacies. See link
There are no spiders on Antarctica: there's no food chain for them there.
food and their thumbs
There are no native people in Antarctica.
Antarctica is uninhabited; it has no staple food, at least for people. Penguins who live there eat fish.
Dry food or supplement.
Antarctica has no fixed population, no own industry and no farming. People there mainly eat whatever it is that they have brought with them.
they eat seal meat if they don't have enough food
People who live and work temporarily in Antarctica eat the food that their government imports to the continent for them to eat. A generous supply of calories are required by humans at work there, because of the extreme conditions.
All food consumed on Antarctica is imported by the country that supports the individual research station. Food, then, is typically what the scientist would eat in his/her home country. Exceptions are produce that scientists grow in hydroponic labs for consumption there. These include lettuce, tomato, spices and edible flowers.
There are no polar bears in Antarctica. If there were, they would eat the penguins.
Animals that breed on Antarctica's beaches have a tendency to be part of the food chain, especially the newborns.