Antarctica is a continent dedicated to science and it is where scientists study the health of planet earth.
What's in Antarctica is data, and this is what is useful for every human.
they travel by boat or they could travel by walking
some people think that people live in Antarctica. But there wrong. Scientist have reasarchedand they have found out that nobody on earth could live there.
Everyone who travels to Antarctica could be considered to be an 'important person'.
People survived in Antarctica before civilization by hunting and gathering. the people who lived in Antarctica could have obviously NOT grown crops or plants to eat because of the cold temperature.
anyone please tell me it is important it is for an assignment
No, Antarctica is not a country itself, but some territory is claimed by countries such as Australia, Britain, Argentina, Chile, etc. Some claims overlap each other. No existing claim is valid nor are new claims allowed per the Antarctic Treaty, signed in the 1960s. So you could not be a citizen of Antarctica.
by people helping the animals to survive.
There are no animals that live on the Antarctic continent -- some animals come to the beach to breed and nurture their young. There are no notable plants that live in Antarctica, a few grasses and mosses. People live in Antarctica who work for countries. They live in man-made dwellings and survive by wearing extreme cold weather gear. People who live there work in pursuit of science.
Even though there are seven continents the International Olympic Committee considers there to be five continents.1) The IOC combines North America and South America into one and calls it 'The Americas'.2) There are no countries in Antarctica and no indigenous people, therefore, no athlete competes under a flag of Antarctica or a nation within Antarctica.
Tourists visit Antarctica under a different set of guidelines from the guidelines for scientists and those who work in support of science who travel to Antarctica. People who work in Antarctica work for their governments in pursuit of science. Governments issue special extreme cold weather clothing and use equipment designed to withstand the extreme low temperatures in Antarctica. Governments provide housing and food to these workers. It is not legal for governments to use their funds to clothe, feed or house tourists. Tourists are useful in the preservation of Antarctica when the pick up their litter, trash and leave zero evidence behind that they have visited the land -- or ice.
Technically no-one owns any land in Antarctica. Various countries have staked claims in Antarctica but these have not been universally recognised and after the 1959 Antarctica treaty, which essentially prevented any future claims, Antarctica's status has been pretty much unchanged - lots of people claim to own chunks of it but everybody else says they don't. You could say the Australians because they claim the largest chunk of it...
Antarctica, China, Mongolia, Peru and Chile all have cold deserts.