Ships that are hardened against iceberg damage can sail to any part of the Antarctic continent, since the continent is surrounded by the Southern Ocean.
Your answer depends on where the ship can sail close enough to the continent so that a tender can transport humans back and forth from the ship to the continent. There are no commercial ports in Antarctica.
Captain Scott sailed the Discovery to Antarctica in 1901.
Your answer depends on the size and power of the cruise ship, and its capabilities to sail in polar waters -- with icebergs.
Taking an icebreaker ship to Antarctica is an advantage. You have a quick form of transport, and if you get stuck in ice, the icebreaker part of the ship is there to help!
Your answer depends on several variables:Where in Antarctica do you want to go?What is the route you take to get to your Antarctic destination?What is the speed of the ship?One variable is this: if you sail south, in a straight line, and accept that any Antarctic soil is your destination, you will sail about 7,382.957 nautical miles.
the sail flag of couse
its also the part where the main sail is attached
Scott led two expeditions to Antarctica, one aboard the Discovery and the other aboard the Terra Nova.
A Ship Without a Sail was created in 1929.
Sail a Crooked Ship was created in 1961.
You will be on the Atlantic Ocean
Atlantic Ocean