There are many differences between the north and south poles. One difference is,the south pole is colder than the north pole. Another difference is, people live near the north pole and people can not live in the south pole. Another difference is that the south pole has more ice.
Per se, no. The South Pole is a GPS point on the Earth known as 90 degrees S.However, the South Pole is found on the continent of Antarctica, which is a land mass.
It is mostly water and ice bergs
North pole, and south pole.North pole, and south pole.North pole, and south pole.North pole, and south pole.
south pole
no, but the south pole is
Antarctica covers the South Pole.
antarctica
Neither of the continents you list is near the South Pole. The South Pole is located on the continent of Antarctica.
What covers Neptune's poles?
A large piece of ice that covers land is called an Ice Sheet.
The South Pole sits on about two kilometers thick of ice sheet and a continent that covers 10% of the earth's surface.
The latitude at the north pole is 90° North. The latitude at the south pole is 90° south. So the trip from one pole to the other covers 180° of latitude ... just what you would expect when you travel halfway around any sphere.
There are many differences between the north and south poles. One difference is,the south pole is colder than the north pole. Another difference is, people live near the north pole and people can not live in the south pole. Another difference is that the south pole has more ice.
The North Pole isn't a continent. Its just a glacier. The South Pole is a continent. 1, The South Pole is not a continent. It is an imaginary point on the continent of Antarctica. 2, The North Pole is not a glacier. It is an imaginary point on an ice sheet which floats on/covers the Arctic Ocean.
Per se, no. The South Pole is a GPS point on the Earth known as 90 degrees S.However, the South Pole is found on the continent of Antarctica, which is a land mass.
The South Pole is a single point on the planet. The ice you question covers 98% of the continent of Antarctica. There are no countries south of 60 degrees S on Earth.