Antarctica has no established religions (churches, mosques, etc.). The land mass is only populated by science researchers.
Antarctica like america has different religions
On all continents except Antarctica, where there are no indigenous inhabitants or traditional religions.
You could find a believer of every religion on earth in Antarctica among the temporary workers and scientists there.
There is no common religion in Antarctica. Workers in scientific stations -- the only humans in Antarctica -- bring their religions with them from their native countries and worship accordingly.
People who live and work temporarily in Antarctica are not necessarily known by their organized religions' beliefs, rather by their commitment and dedication to science.
Antarctica has no native population. Scientists from all over the world do research there. Those scientists represent a large number of religions.
If you exclude Antarctica (which has no permanent inhabitants), then there are several religions that have followers on every continent, including Christianity, Islam, Judaism, and Buddhism, and probably several others.
Yes, Pakistani researchers. The Islamic Republic of Pakistan is the only Muslim country that maintains a research station in Antarctica and it has maintained a presence there since 1991. So to answer your question: Yes, there are Muslims in Antarctica. Hope this helped.
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The dominant religion in Central America is Roman Catholicism, inherited from Spanish conquistadors who conquered and settled these lands from the 16th to 19th centuries. Antarctica is a continent with research bases from several countries scattered along its surface; no permanent settlements exist there so speaking about "dominant religions" is meaningless.
Antarctica's real name is Antarctica.
Antarctica is a proper noun. It is the name of a continent.