Fabian Gottlieb Thaddeus von Bellingshausen led the First Russian Antarctic Expedition in 1819.
From Wikipedia:
"Leaving Portsmouth on 5 September 1819 the expedition crossed the Antarctic Circle (the first to do so since Cook) on 26 January 1820. "
The first explorer to reach Antarctica was Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen, a Russian naval officer and explorer. He, along with Mikhail Lazarev, led an expedition that sighted the Antarctic mainland on January 27, 1820. Their voyage was significant in mapping the previously uncharted southern continent. Bellingshausen's expedition is often credited with being the first to discover the Antarctic landmass.
The North Pole lies in the Arctic, the South Pole is in the Antarctic. So it'd be impossible to reach North Pole in Antarctic, since it isn't there.
Robert Falcon Scott traveled to Antarctica in 1901 as part of the Discovery Expedition. The expedition used the ship Discovery to reach Antarctica. Scott later made a second expedition to Antarctica in 1910, known as the Terra Nova Expedition, where he attempted to reach the South Pole.
Roald Amundsen reached Antarctica first on December 14, 1911, becoming the first person to reach the South Pole. Robert Falcon Scott arrived about a month later on January 17, 1912, only to discover that Amundsen had beaten him to the pole.
No, Tom Crean was not the first Irishman to go to the Antarctic. The first Irishman to reach the Antarctic was Edward Bransfield, who led an expedition in 1820. Tom Crean was a notable explorer who participated in several expeditions to Antarctica in the early 20th century.
The first explorer to reach Antarctica was Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen, a Russian naval officer and explorer. He, along with Mikhail Lazarev, led an expedition that sighted the Antarctic mainland on January 27, 1820. Their voyage was significant in mapping the previously uncharted southern continent. Bellingshausen's expedition is often credited with being the first to discover the Antarctic landmass.
Fabian Gottlieb Benjamin von Bellingshausen was the first person to see the continent of Antarctica on the 27th January 1820. Some historians believe that John Davis, an American sealer, may have set foot on the Antarctic Peninsula in 1821, but even he was unsure if he landed on the continent itself or a nearby island.
The first Indian woman to reach Antarctica was Mehar Moos.
James Cook did not actually reach Antarctica. What he did manage to accomplish was being the first European explorer to cross the Antarctic Circle, doing so twice. He could not reach the continent due to the pack ice and the fact that his sails froze.
Atlantic ocean and south ocean.
Lt. Ram Charan was the first Indian to reach Antarctica. THE TIMES OF INDIA City..Dr Syed Zahur Qasim who led the first Indian expedition to Antarctica still remembers the events with a twinkle in his eyes.
Bhuwan singh Bishwakarma
That would depend on your definition of "reach". 1773: Captain James Cook became the first person to cross the Antarctic Circle. 1820: The Antarctic continent was first seen by human eyes. Historians have disagreed on who those eyes belonged to; at least one possible claimant is believed to have seen land but mistaken it for ice at the time. Credit for being the first man to see the continent has been divided between three men who made separate voyages to Antarctica that year: Fabian von Bellingshausen, a captain in the Russian Imperial Navy; Edward Bransfield, a captain in the British navy; Nathaniel Brown Palmer, an American sealer. 1840: Frenchman Jules-Sébastien-César Dumont d'Urville became the first person to set foot on Antarctica. (Some historians believe that John Davis, an American sealer, may have set foot on the Antarctic Peninsula in 1821, but even he was unsure if he landed on the continent itself or a nearby island.)
The North Pole lies in the Arctic, the South Pole is in the Antarctic. So it'd be impossible to reach North Pole in Antarctic, since it isn't there.
He never reached the South Pol and died trying
you would be in Antarctica.
From UK, you head south to reach Antarctica.