Summer and Winter. A really long summer and winter. They both take up half the year.
No. Tundra implies growing seasons. The South Pole is occupied by about two-miles thick of ice and the land beneath the ice sheet is below sea level.
south pole
North pole, and south pole.North pole, and south pole.North pole, and south pole.North pole, and south pole.
The North Pole is at 90 North & the South Pole is at 90 South.
No. The South Pole is in the Antarctic. The North Pole is in the Arctic.
yes
The seasons at the poles are spring, summer, fall and winter. Because the poles are in different hemispheres, the seasons are opposite. The dates that the seasons change is the same at both poles. For example, when it is winter at the South Pole, it's summer at the North Pole.
they have all four seasons but they only get effect on winter
The sun rises at the South Pole on about September 21 and sets on about March 21. These dates mark the beginning of spring and the beginning of fall. The seasons in Australia are the same as those at the South Pole -- the answer you want is: two seasons, spring and summer.
The seasons in the Northern Hemisphere are exactly the opposite of the seasons in the Southern Hemisphere.
The sun rises at the South Pole on about September 21 and sets on about March 21. These dates mark the beginning of spring and the beginning of fall. The seasons in Australia are the same as those at the South Pole -- the answer you want is: two seasons, spring and summer.
No. Tundra implies growing seasons. The South Pole is occupied by about two-miles thick of ice and the land beneath the ice sheet is below sea level.
The Earth's axis passes through the North and South Poles. This axis is an imaginary line that runs through the center of the Earth from the North Pole to the South Pole. It is tilted at an angle of approximately 23.5 degrees relative to the plane of its orbit around the Sun, which is what causes the seasons.
It takes about 12,450.5 miles from the north pole to the south pole or south pole to north pole.
south pole
south pole
South Pole or Antarctica. Most likely South Pole.