No, The North Pole is a point in the Arctic Ocean, and the South Pole is a point on the continent of Antarctica.
Antarctica
The south pole, which is on the Antarctic continent.
You can find the South Pole south of the Equator -- on the continent of Antarctica.
The South Pole is an imaginary spot on the continent of Antarctica. You are getting confused by the over use of the terms North and South Poles as regions, when we should be using Arctic for the North, and Antarctic for the South.
The North Pole does not have any land beneath it, as it is located in the Arctic Ocean and is covered by sea ice. In contrast, the South Pole sits on the continent of Antarctica, which is a landmass covered by ice and snow. Therefore, the South Pole has more land under it compared to the North Pole.
The only pole on a continent is on antartica
The South Pole has land, the North Pole does not!(To be more specific and accurate, the South Pole is not actually a continent, but is situated on the continent of Antarctica.)For more information, see 'Related links' below.
The South Pole is located on the continent of Antarctica. The North Pole is however located in the Arctic Ocean.
All of them. Everywhere on earth is south of the north pole, except the north pole itself.
The south pole is located in Antarctica. There is no continent under the north pole.
The Earth's south pole is located on the Antarctic continent.The north pole is located on pack ice in the Arctic Ocean.
The North Pole isn't a continent. Its just a glacier. The South Pole is a continent. 1, The South Pole is not a continent. It is an imaginary point on the continent of Antarctica. 2, The North Pole is not a glacier. It is an imaginary point on an ice sheet which floats on/covers the Arctic Ocean.
Antarctica
Antarctica is the continent that the South Pole can be found on.
The south pole is situated on the continent of Antarctica.
The South Pole is located on the polar plateau of the continent of Antarctica.
You can find Antarctica at the South Pole. There is no continent at the North Pole.