A lot of the Antarctic Stations were set in the 1950's because 1957 was International Geophysical Year (IGY). The IGY then triggered an eighteen-month year of Antarctic science.
All scientific stations on Antarctica support the temporary workers and scientists who gather data there about the health of planet Earth.
Why were national parks set up in the 1950s
58 years old It is my understanding he was 21 or 22 years old. He was born in 1799 and set foot on Antarctica in late 1820.
The only buildings on Antarctica, are the temporary building set up by various nations scientific study groups. Everything has to be transported a long distance. Most scientists abandon Antarctica during the winter, returning when Antarctica's short summer returns.
All time zones make their way through the 'topics': there is no 'tropical time zone'. Antarctica has no time zones. Research stations set their clock so as to coordinate with their support countries' time zones. There is no standard.
1950s
The 1950s.
There are no wild packs of huskies roaming the antarctic, but you might find some being kept as sled dogs at any of the research stations that humans ahve set up out there.
An O gauge Marx toy train set made in the late 1940s or early 1950s
Your answer depends on what you mean by 'trouble'. Antarctica is a more-or-less male-centric locale, with facilities for women more rare than those for men. This is because women are outnumbered in Antarctica -- research stations -- by about 8-12:1, depending on your location. An Antarctic tourist may have a different set of issues, depending on the tourist.
Robert Falcon Scott set out for Antarctica in 1901 and again in 1910.
As a result of Australia's pioneering work in Antarctica, 42% of the continent was established as the Australian Antarctic Territory (AAT) in 1936. In 1947, the Australian Government formed the Australian National Antarctic Research Expedition (ANARE) to set up and maintain scientific research stations in Antarctica. ANARE participants come from various Federal and State government bodies as well as universities. Australia shares its Antarctic Territory with other countries, notably Russia, who has a number of stations in the AAT.