The South Pole was discovered by explorers on December 14, 1911, by a Norwegian explorer named Roald Amundsen.
Christopher Columbus discovered that the Scandinavian vikings had discovered America first because they were on there way to find the poles. (north pole and south pole)
No. Whilst Kangaroo Island was the first region settled in South Australia, it was not discovered first. Kangaroo Island was discovered by Matthew Flinders in 1802. Various early Dutch explorers ventured into South Australia's western coastline during the 1600s. South Australia could be said to have been discovered in 1627, when Thijssen recorded the first observations of the South Australian coast.
they all were discovered by french explorers all but the US was discovered by french explorers...
China and/or India.
90 Degrees.
I'm not so sure there R any explorers in the south pole.
Explorers already have. There is a research station from the US at the south pole.
South Pole
Until explorers confirmed that the continent of Antarctica was a solid continent, maps generally terminated before showing the --unknown -- geography of the South Pole. Explorers finally set foot at the South Pole in 1911 and 1912.
According to the history books, it was the North Pole in 1909, with the South Pole following 2 years later. But, seeing the considerable doubt that has been uncovered about Peary's claim to the North Pole, there may have to be a revision.
Yes, explorers have reached both the North and South Poles. The first successful expedition to the North Pole was led by Robert Peary in 1909, while the South Pole was first reached by Roald Amundsen in 1911.
Amundsen discovered the south pole.
scott and his clang
Roald Amundsen was the leader of the first group of explorers to reach the South Pole in 1911. He and his team reached the South Pole on December 14, 1911, beating the British explorer Robert Falcon Scott.
Roald Amundsen was their leader.
Roald Amundsen.
explorers carry green vegetables and fruit juices because so that they can get proper nutrition.