Antarctica is the highest, darkest, driest, windiest, coldest and iciest continent on earth.
Antarctica is a polar desert.
Yes, you could use this description for the continent.
The Sahara is the second largest desert after Antarctica.
Australia would fit this description as would Antarctica. continents.
Generally, Antarctica is too cold for tundra, except in the Antarctic peninsula where you can find Antarctic hair grass (Deschampsia antarctica) and Antarctic pearlwort (Colobanthus quitensis). You may find other tundra dwellers on sub- Antarctic islands.
Cube is not the description most scientists use: the term is ice sheet. Antarctica's land mass is 98% covered -- by an ice sheet.
Antarctica is mainly ice that covers 98 per cent of the land. The rest is barren rock.Antarctica is the highest, driest, darkest, windiest, coldest and iciest continent on earth.
The question is confusing. Antarctica is counted among the continents, so any point you specify in Antarctica is on the Antarctic continent. And in that regard, I must also remark that your description of the places you're referring to is none too clear either. It's not correct to describe a place as being "210 degrees longitude line".
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No such mammal lives on the Antarctic continent. Sea leopards and whales may fit your description, and their habitat is the Southern Ocean.
Antarctica's real name is Antarctica.
Antarctica is a proper noun. It is the name of a continent.