There are no civilizations in Antarctica - no human beings have ever set up permanent residence there. Scientists can be found there, but only for part of the year. The conditions are too extreme to allow any other arrangement.
No.
There is no economy in Antarctica: there is no commerce, civilization or sovereignty.
People survived in Antarctica before civilization by hunting and gathering. the people who lived in Antarctica could have obviously NOT grown crops or plants to eat because of the cold temperature.
antarctica, bottom of the globe
The continent with no civilization is Antarctica. It is the southernmost continent on Earth, covered mostly by ice and uninhabitable due to extreme cold temperatures.
In Antarctica -- when you live there as a worker in support of science, you are fed by the government's mess standards.There are no restaurants in Antarctica, per se, because there is no civilization on the continent, except for scientific research stations.
Since there is no Human civilizations in Antarctica there is no debt what so ever and There is research that it is also rich in oil deposits so if there was a civilization there they would have control of the oil.
Antarctica has no civilisation. It does not have any permanent inhabitants, and instead research scientists rotate around but do not permanently live there.
You may be thinking of ice fields, glaciers or an ice sheet, all of which can be found in Antarctica. Ice shields are more common in civilization where they are used to protect homes and buildings.
There are no counties, states, cities or civilization of any kind that you can find everywhere else on earth -- on the Antarctic continent.
There is no particular costume for Antarctica as there are no permanent residents there. Neither is there any evidence of there ever being a native civilization there. The visiting scientists just wear normal western style cold-weather and protective clothing.
Antarctica is the continent with no indigenous human population or civilizations. It is primarily inhabited by researchers and support staff who live temporarily in research stations.