You may be thinking of Albatross, which spends about 75% of its life 'on the wing'.
Albatross may venture as far south as the Sub-Antarctic islands: they are not found on the continent.
600,000 people fly to the Antarctica everyday. 35% are scientist.
You are over Antarctica in an airplane, probably.
A fly that lives on Antarctica
any of them.. i guess
A fly that lives on Antarctica
most people don't like going to Antarctica so they wouldn't fly over to Argentina. however you could row to Antarctica, (best take a coat)
I doubt that any helicopter can fly from Antarctica to Australia.
$4,000 to $8,000
in 1925 Richard byrd flew over antarctica
No, FedEx does not fly to Antarctica. There is no commerce there to pay for FedEx services, nor is there any commercial air infrastructure to support commercial airplanes, anywhere on the continent.
If you could fly in a straight line, like a bird, according to Google Maps, you'd fly 7,879.796 miles from Connecticut to Palmer Station, Antarctica.
Penguin