Many. There is no standard time across the whole of the Antarctic continent.
Scientific stations keep the same clock time as their country's, based on the interaction between the country-based support staff and those based in Antarctica.
There is no Antarctic Standard Time. Research stations in Antarctica keep the same time as their native country's support locations.
No. The passage of time is exactly the same in Antarctica as it is elsewhere around the earth.
Each research station bases its time clocks in the country that supports the station. There is no standard time in Antarctica.
Same time we do, I think.
Antarctica is a possession of no country.
No country is in possession of Antarctica.
Since Antarctica is at the South Pole, and all of the time zones have a common point there, logically, there would be a part of Antarctica that would occupy each of the time zones simultaneously. The better question would be "in what time zone is the South Pole itself?"
Every country on earth is due north of Antarctica.
The Arctic is opposite Antarctica. Like Antarctica, no country owns the Arctic
Antarctica is not a country. The largest country in the world is Russia.
Antarctica is not a country, it is a continent.
Robert Falcon Scott sailed for the continent of Antarctica, which is not a country and was not at the time.