You may be thinking of the territorial claims on the continent, which are pie-shaped and some overlap each other.
Or you may be thinking of East and West Antarctica, or you may be thinking of the contours of the continent, 98% of which is currently covered by an ice sheet.
You may be thinking of East Antarctica and West Antarctica, separated by the Trans-antarctic Mountain Range.
East and West Antarctica are separated by an imaginary line, so they are neighbors.
Antarctica is a continent of approximately 14,000,000 sq km. The Transantarctic Mountains divide Antarctica into east and west. East Antarctica constitutes the bulk of the land mass and is the oldest part of the continent. West Antarctica is the newer and smaller area which includes the Antarctic Peninsula and consists of four land areas separated by deep water.
Depending on the context, you may be thinking of east Antarctica and west Antarctica, separated by the Trans-Antarctic mountains.
The three parts of Antarctica are:East AntarcticaWest AntarcticaThe Antarctic Peninsula
Antarctica is a continent of approximately 14,000,000 sq km. The Transantarctic Mountains divide Antarctica into east and west. East Antarctica constitutes the bulk of the land mass and is the oldest part of the continent. West Antarctica is the newer and smaller area which includes the Antarctic Peninsula and consists of four land areas separated by deep water.
Antarctica is a continent of approximately 14,000,000 sq km. The Transantarctic Mountains divide Antarctica into east and west. East Antarctica constitutes the bulk of the land mass and is the oldest part of the continent. West Antarctica is the newer and smaller area which includes the Antarctic Peninsula and consists of four land areas separated by deep water.
Your answer depends on the types of parts you're counting. Essentially, Antarctica is a single continent.
You may be thinking of East and West Antarctica, separated by the Trans-Antarctic mountains.
Yes as the continents were not separated at that time
There are no countries in Antarctica, but various countries have claimed parts of it.
Antarctica is a continent.There are classically seven: North America, South America, Asia, Europe, Africa, Australia, and Antarctica.Historically, Australia, Antarctica, and India were part of a continental mass that separated from the supercontinent of Pangaea. India separated first, then Australia, and both moved north.Antarctica is a continent.Antarctica is its own continent.