Scientists visit Antarctica and measure the sea levels and test the ice thickness. There are alot of tests that can be done to show how the climate in Antarctica is changing. The research is obviously then used to teach others about the conditions in Antarctica.
Scientists are worried about the effects of global warming everywhere. Antarctica is far colder even than the Arctic, so effects are not easy to see. However scientists are watching the glaciers and ice shelves of Western Antarctica as they come right down and along the sea bed. The warmer water is melting the shelves from underneath and this is letting huge pieces break off and drift away. The biggest and most famous piece, called B-15, broke off (or calved) in March, 2000. It measured around 295 km long and 37 km wide (183-23 miles), with an area of 11,000 km² (6,835 miles²), larger than the island of Jamaica. Its weight was around three billion tonnes. Almost ten years later, parts of B-15 had still not melted.
In Antarctica, meteorologists study weather. These are the same professionals who study weather all over the planet.
The usual suspects as in other parts of the world, co2 emissions, pollution, etc.
Probably, yes.,
Scientists want to learn about ocean currents because the currents affect Earth's climate and atmosphere and act as conveyor belts.
why you cant see them
By looking at the air trapped inside bubbles, fossils, and tree rings.
They can learn about changes in organic productivity, climate, and other ocean phenomena going back more than 150 million years.
Scientists learn about climate and how it has changed by studying climates of the past. By analyzing changes that have occurred in the earth's temperature over time, scientists can gain a better understanding of global warming, and make determinations about its possible causes.
Ice cores are useful for scientists who want to learn about the climate in Antarctica thousands of years ago.
with technology
Historical records of temperature and climateSatellite measurementsComputer modelsWeather chartsPeer experiments
You can't learn languages in Antarctica. The scientists who live there are working, and would not have time to teach you.
Antarctica's greatest natural resource is data that scientists study to learn more about the health of planet earth.
People working in support of science and scientists visit Antarctica -- some for up to two years -- to learn more about the health of planet earth. There is no permanent population in Antarctica.
an antohometer
Scientists want to learn about ocean currents because the currents affect Earth's climate and atmosphere and act as conveyor belts.
The layers in the soil can give a fingerprint of the climate.
Antarctica's only usable resource -- according to the Antarctic Treaty -- is data, which scientists collect and analyse to learn more about the health of planet earth.
The climate at the time the fossile was preserved. :)
why are you searching it up? you should have known