No.
Alaska is near the Arctic, the North Pole. Antarctica(ant from anti) is at the South Pole.
Alaska. Antarctica is about 30 degrees F colder than its northern polar counterparts. Alaska is not as far north as Antarctica is south, so it is clearly much warmer than Antarctica.
No, Alaska is not close to Antarctica. Alaska is located in the northern hemisphere, while Antarctica is located in the southern hemisphere. The two regions are separated by thousands of miles and several other countries.
That's near Concordia Station in Antarctica.
No, the only continental glaciers are in Greenland and Antarctica.
The North Pole is near the Arctic region, which is located in the northern part of the Earth near the North Pole. Antarctica is at the opposite end of the Earth, in the southern hemisphere. Europe is a continent located between Asia and the Atlantic Ocean.
No. Alaska is considered part of the Arctic in the northern hemisphere. Antarctica is in the southern hemisphere.
Alaska. Antarctica is about 30 degrees F colder than its northern polar counterparts. Alaska is not as far north as Antarctica is south, so it is clearly much warmer than Antarctica.
No, Alaska is the northern-most state of the United States; Antarctica is a continent in the southern hemisphere governed by the Antarctic Treaty.
No, Alaska is not close to Antarctica. Alaska is located in the northern hemisphere, while Antarctica is located in the southern hemisphere. The two regions are separated by thousands of miles and several other countries.
Antarctica is colder than Alaska
Most of Alaska gets much more snow than most of Antarctica.
Yes
No, the South Pole is located on Antarctica in the Southern Hemisphere. Alaska is located northwest of North America -- west of Canada, in the Northern Hemisphere.
There aren't any deer in most of Alaska. There are some down in Southeast Alaska near Juneau and Sitka, Ketchikan area, and some deer on islands, but none anywhere else in Alaska. Moose are all over, and they are technically the biggest type of deer. But as far as normal deer, not in Alaska.
No, consider Antarctica.
While Alaska and Antarctica have much in common -- both being rather polar in their climates, they are not mirror images of each other. Humans have lived in Alaska for about 10,000 years: no people have ever lived in Antarctica -- the continent is too cold to support life.
Yes. It is in Antarctica.