I'm not sure but i think far north or south
Antartica.
No, Emperor Penguins do not live on the South Pole, but they do inhabit Antarctica, with their colonies located near the coast of the continent. They are well-adapted to the harsh conditions of Antarctica and are the largest species of penguin.
They don't. Penguins inhabit the southern hemisphere.
No, emperor penguins do not live in the Atlantic Ocean. They primarily inhabit Antarctica and surrounding waters in the Southern Ocean.
The collective nouns for penguins are: a creche of penguins a colony of penguins a huddle of penguins a parade of penguins a rookery of penguins The emperor and Adélie colonies are distributed around the coastline of the Antarctic continent; the Magellanic penguin makes its home along the coastlines of South America, on both the Atlantic and Pacific shores; the African penguin gather off the islands of the coast of southwestern Africa; the rockhopper penguins inhabit shorelines of the islands north of Antarctica, from Chile to New Zealand.
Yes, the South Pole is on the continent of Antarctica. Note, however, that penguins are sea birds and make their homes in ocean waters. They breed, however, on Antarctica's beaches, because there are no land predators there.
Humans do not inhabit the continent of Antarctica permanently, but there are settlements there where teams of scientists study aspects of the great frozen continent.
Two of the 17 known species of penguins live along the coast of Antartica. The majority of the remainder inhabit coastlines from the Antarctic Circle to temperate regions even farther north. New Zealand, the Falkland Islands, the Galápagos Islands and desert coastlines of South America and southern Africa are home to the largest penguin populations.
Africa
Penguins are flightless birds. They inhabit the Antarctic.
Humboldt penguins are a penguin breed in South America. They inhabit coastal Peru and Chile.
The Puritans were more common in the North Colonies, I believe.