Though Australia may have claimed a large portion of it in the past, no country can lay claim to any portion of Antarctica. It is administered by international agreement whereby all countries on application can have equal access to it.
Australia has one country on it. Antarctica has zero countries on it. (Several countries claim some portion of Antarctica, but those claims are not internationally recognized.)
They can certainly claim a portion of the estate. They are entitled to it as much as any other descendants. And in most cases if there is no will, there is a portion of the estate that they get.
Yes. Argentine Antarctica, called the Department of Tierra del Fuego, Antarctica, and South Atlantic Islands Province has been claimed by Argentina since 1942. The breadth of their claim is 25°W to 74°W latitude which, like all territorial claims, terminates at 90°S. Their claim overlaps existing claims of Chile and the United Kingdom. Argentina's claim is registered as part of the Antarctic Treaty as an existing claim, as are the overlapping claims. The treaty also prohibits any commercial activity on land south of 60° S, and dedicates this land to the scientific study of planet Earth.
Yes. The insurance company will pay their portion of the claim which does not include the deductible because that is your portion .
the claim gets denied
Rodrigo de Triana was on Columbus's ship. His claim to fame was having cried out, "Tierra!" (Land!) upon discovering the New World.
yes
==One Answer== Spousal election is the method used in certain states for a spouse to claim a portion of the estate of a deceased spouse who disinherited them by will. Generally the disinherited spouse can elect to claim a portion equal to what they would have received if the decedent had died intestate.
The non-recoverable portion of a claim is that part of the claim the insurer will not pay because it is not covered under your insurance policy. There would be no point in filing a claim on that which is not insured.
Jerusalem
Several South American countries claim portions of Antarctica, but no country controls the continent, including other countries in the world that also claim portions of Antarctica.