Antarctica covers 10$ of the earth's surface and is a cold, polar desert. It is the coldest continent on earth, with temperatures ranging from the mid-50s F to the mid-120s F below zero, depending on where you are on the continent, and the time of the year.
Normal weather in Antarctica is windy and icy cold and is known as extreme cold weather.
Antarctica is always extremely cold.
The average temperature in Antarctica in January is -16 degrees Fahrenheit. Antarctica is in the southern hemisphere which makes January a summer month on the continent.
No, the fish in Antarctica adapt to the environment's temperature.
Yes, it's normal frozen water or normal sea water.
Antarctica is normal land, 98% of it just happens to be covered with ice. The seals breed on Antarctica's beaches and enjoy sunning and resting on that ice during that season.
the lowest temperature recorded in Antarctica is -128.6 F
The coldest temperature in antarctica was recorded at ther Vostok Station.
By night, one must assume that you mean during sun-less periods. At the South Pole, the sun-less period is about six months and the temperature during that period averages between minus 65 and minus 75 degrees F. Elsewhere on the continent, the sun-less periods vary as does the temperature, which is always extremely cold.
The lowest temperature ever recorded in the Arctic region was -69.6°C (-93.3°F) in Greenland. In the Antarctic region, the lowest temperature recorded was -89.2°C (-128.6°F) at the Soviet Union’s Vostok Station.
Your answer depends on where in Antarctica you choose to measure the temperature. Antarctica covers 10% of the planet earth, and is about as large as USA and Mexico combined. It's a polar climate, so temperatures overall rarely rise above zero degrees F. The coldest temperature recorded on earth was recorded at Vostok Station, Antarctica. Antarctica is the coldest continent on earth.
Antarctica holds the record for the lowest recorded temperature on Earth. The lowest temperature ever recorded on Earth was at the Soviet Union's Vostok Station in Antarctica, with a temperature of -128.6 degrees Fahrenheit (-89.2 degrees Celsius) in 1983.