Today, there is no mining activity in Antarctica. This preserves Antarctica's pristine condition.
All would be fine and no one would die at all :)
The freeze-thaw cycle does happen in Antarctica, but the thaw is never complete.
They aren't considered to be ores because ores are partly mineral and partly metal. The metal deposits are purely metal.
This would be underground mining.
All mining is bad. If it is strip mining, the water cannot be slowed down and mud slides can happen. The trees are gone so wildlife has nowhere to live. All vegetation is gone and it leaves a wasteland. It would take 100 years and longer to replace what mining can destroy.
There is no mining in Antarctica.
There is no mining allowed in Antarctica.
There are no countries mining in Antarctica. Amongst other things, the Antarctic Treaty prevents mining in Antarctica.
There is no mining allowed in Antarctica.
There IS no mining in Antarctica- it is protected by international treaty.
There is no mining allowed in Antarctica according to The Antarctic Treaty.
There is no mining in Antarctica: The Antarctic Treaty forbids it.
There is no mining in Antarctica, no mining south of 60 degrees S, per the Antarctic Treaty.
There is no mining activity in Antarctica: it is prohibited by the Antarctic Treaty.
No mining is permitted in Antarctica: it is forbidden by The Antarctic Treaty.
There is no mining in Antarctica -- it is forbidden by The Antarctic Treaty System.
Economical pressure on Antarctica