One Ton Depot -- they died in their tent 11 miles away -- was laid at about 80 degrees S, about 750 miles south of the South Pole.
The body of Antarctic explorer Robert Falcon Scott was found only a few miles from the geographic South Pole. It was left there, with a large ice cairn raised over the bodies of Scott and his remaining companions, Wilson and Bowers.
New Zealands Scott Base on Ross Island is 1,370.64 kilometres, (851.676 miles) from the Geographical South Pole.
This is dependent on how far it is tipping from the sun. If it is tipping as far away as possible, then it is the middle of Winter.
The moon is far closer to Earth than any star is.
It is in the Little Bear orYour Answer is: Ursa Major.Saptarshi, has nothing to do with A+LS so, don't pay it any attention.And Congradulations. for making it this far to your High School Diploma. Keep on pushing yourself. You will succeed.By:Reginald L. Johnson IIPotomac Job Corps Centerreginaldljohnson@hotmail.comHave a Great Day!
Sir Robert Falcon Scott died closer to the Antarctic beach than to the South Pole (lat 90S), 10 miles from One Ton Depot (lat 79.30S), which was not far from the expedition's base camp.
The body of Antarctic explorer Robert Falcon Scott was found only a few miles from the geographic South Pole. It was left there, with a large ice cairn raised over the bodies of Scott and his remaining companions, Wilson and Bowers.
New Zealands Scott Base on Ross Island is 1,370.64 kilometres, (851.676 miles) from the Geographical South Pole.
Claiming to be the first to reach the North Pole. However, there is now considerable doubt that he actually did make it as far as the North Pole.
The North Pole and the South Pole are far away from the equator.
About 12,440 miles.
From his journal, recovered some eight months after all perished in the tent, you can read: "We shall stick it out to the end, but we are getting weaker, of course, and the end cannot be far. It seems a pity, but I do not think I can write more. R Scott Last entry For God's sake look after our people."
The North Pole is as far north as one can get.
About 12,440 miles.
42 degress right
There isn't a polar plateau as such, at the North Pole. It is found at the South Pole.
Sir Earnest Henry Shackleton reached the 'farthest south' marker of 88°23'S, or 97 geographical miles from the South Pole on his second expedition to Antarctica in 1907. Some say it was this marker that motivated Sir Robert Falcon Scott to better Shackleton's achievement, when Scott returned in 1910 for his own 'conquest of the pole'.