None.
There are no native animals or plants in Antarctica. Penguins, seals and a few other birds come to the continent to breed, but do not live on the continent. They live in the sea.
There is no native population on the Antarctic continent, nor has there ever been such.
No. There are no native peoples who live on the Antarctic continent.
There are no native animals on the Antarctic continent.
There are no permanent of native peoples who populate the Antarctic continent. This means that there are no Antarctic cultures, per se.
No. This is because there are no native animals that live on the Antarctic continent.
There are no herbivores or carnivores or omnivores that live on the Antarctic continent: it's too cold and there is no food chain.
There are no huskies, nor are there any animals native to the Antarctic continent.
Asia, because there is no permanent or native population on the Antarctic continent.
Yes, Antarctica is considered a continent. It is the fifth-largest continent in terms of land area and is covered by ice sheets.
The Antarctic is a region that contains the continent Antarctica.
There are no countries on the Antarctic continent. It is governed by the Antarctic Treaty.
No. The first human visitors to the Antarctic continent didn't arrive until the early 1800s. It's too cold there to support any kind of life: there are no native or indigenous peoples on the continent.