Millions of seals find billions of krill and millions of fish to eat in the protein-rich Southern Ocean that surrounds Antarctica. They can also dine on other seals and sea birds. Except for Orca whales, seals -- especially the Leopard Seals -- are the top of the food chain there.
Antarctica is a polar desert, 98% of which is covered with an ice sheet. The term desertification implies that the geography was once fertile land, which is not necessarily applicable to Antarctica without going back millions of years in geological history.
Antarctica is the frigid, ice-covered continent around the South Pole. There are no indigenous humans there, and its most prominent animal is the penguin, which is native only to southern oceans. Central Antarctica is covered by a massive ice cap that is a mile thick, formed from snowfall over millions of years. For half of the year, there is almost no sunlight around the South Pole, and Antarctica is surrounded by frozen sea ice. Between 1000 and 5000 scientists are in Antarctica at any given time, and the continent is covered by a treaty that bans industrial development by any country.
Antarctica
Antarctica is an icy place
One symbolic place on Antarctica is the South Pole.
Antarctica is not the place for experiments, Antarctica is the place for basic research. Research there studies the health of planet Earth.
Every place and any place you can 'see' in Antarctica is a must-see place.
there is a bit of wind in Antarctica as it is a windy place.
Antarctica is the best place to find data about the health of planet earth.
Counting from the right, the millions place is the first "1."
Yes, all of Antarctica is a 'place to see'.
Utopia is the term meaning no place, in the literal translation, or ideal place, in the commonly used meaning.