No animals live at the South Pole, because it's too cold and there is no food chain.
You're thinking of sea-birds, specifically penguins, that breed on Antarctica's beaches during a few weeks or months in the Austral Spring. The closest beach to the South Pole is about 750 miles north.
Penguins are not aero-dynamic, they are acqua-dynamic -- they fly through water, where they 'live'.
penguin
Norway was the first Scandinavian country to fly its flag at the South Pole. Roald Amundsen, a Norwegian explorer, led the first successful expedition to reach the South Pole in 1911.
No. If you fly due south, you will not reach the north pole. Though you may start your journey pointing due south, once you fly past the south pole, assuming that you did not change direction, you would begin flying north (because the Earth is round). While you would eventually reach the north pole, you would not be flying due south when you did.
Yes, the Arctic tern is known for having the longest migration route of any bird, traveling from its breeding grounds in the Arctic to its wintering grounds in the Antarctic and back. This round-trip migration can total around 44,000 miles or more.
Richard E. Byrd was a navigator and expedition leader who claimed that he was the first to fly over the South and North Poles. However, his claims were disputed and majority of polar experts believe that Roald Amundsen has the first verifiable flight claim to each pole.
penguin
Half the world away (8000 miles as a neutrino would fly, 12,500 miles as a bird would fly.)
I believe it is the Arctic Tern
The only mammal that can fly is the bat, so that must be the answer.
They fly.
To hibernate so if the north is to cold then the bird will fly to the south and when th south is to cold the bird will fly to the north a gain
Ostrich
Norway was the first Scandinavian country to fly its flag at the South Pole. Roald Amundsen, a Norwegian explorer, led the first successful expedition to reach the South Pole in 1911.
1929
Penguin
Robert Falcon Scott
No. If you fly due south, you will not reach the north pole. Though you may start your journey pointing due south, once you fly past the south pole, assuming that you did not change direction, you would begin flying north (because the Earth is round). While you would eventually reach the north pole, you would not be flying due south when you did.