Casey, Davis and Mawson are the names of the three main research facilities supported by the Australian government.
The United States supports three research stations, all of which are permanent. They are McMurdo Station, Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station and Palmer Station. Other summer and temporary stations appear seasonally.
You can refer to the map, below, to identify those stations that qualify for your definition of 'inland' as locations for research stations on the Antarctic continent.
The Australian Antarctic Division operates several permanent bases on the Antarctic continent, namely, Casey, Davis, Macquarie Island and Mawson. During the summer, there are additional, temporary locations where research camps are operated.
From Google search results: "The Australian Antarctic Division maintains four permanent research stations. Mawson (67°36′09″ S, 62°52′24″ E), Davis (68.5764° S, 77.9689° E) and Casey (66°16′56″ S, 110°31′40″ E) are on the Antarctic continent, and Macquarie Island (54°30S, 158°57E) is in the subantarctic."
Yes. The waters included are those within 200 nautical miles of Australia's Antarctic Territory, which is defined by three lines of latitude and longitude.
The country with the most permanent -- year 'round operation -- research stations is Argentina, with six. An additional summer station is also supported by the Argentine Antarctic Institute. The Russian Antarctic Expedition supports seven stations, only four of which are permanent, and three of which operate in the summer. One of these is a joint-support venture with Belarus.
Three Stations has 256 pages.
Three Stations was created on 2010-08-10.
The ISBN of Three Stations is 0-7432-7674-4.
The United States of America supports three research stations on the Antarctic continent: McMurdo Station, Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, and Palmer Station.
The proposed plate called the Capricorn Plate is a relatively rigid oceanic structure that was the westernmost part of the Indo-Australian Plate, which is now believed to exist as three separate smaller plates: the Indian Plate, the Australian Plate, and the Capricorn Plate.
The Taylor, Beardmore, and Amundsen Glaciers are three of the many glaciers in the Antarctic.