Though Australia may have claimed a large portion of it in the past, no country can lay claim to any portion of Antarctica. It is administered by international agreement whereby all countries on application can have equal access to it.
In addition to Antarctica, there are also large populations of penguins in Argentina, Australia, Chile, New Zealand, and South Africa.
Australia would fit this description as would Antarctica. continents.
Your question is a judgement call, and you are the judge.
Almost the entire continent of Antarctica is desert. Africa and Australia also have large areas covered by deserts.
Antarctica is a continent that is surrounded by the southern ocean. It is the only continent that does not have any permanent inhabitants.
Northern Territory
Australia, Antarctica, Europe and North America. And technically Asia does not touch the equator either if you just consider the one large land mass itself,
Asia, Africa, North America, South America, Europe, Australia and Antarctica
The seven large landmasses of Earth's surface are: Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, and South America.
North America, South America, Europe, Africa, Asia, Antarctica and Australia.
Antarctica is about as large as USA and Mexico combined.
Antarctica is divided up by several countries as many made claims.many countries have their own section of antarctica that they have applied for, but they can't do everything they want on it even though they own it. a decleration was signed by like 80 countries that outlined the rules and regulations of antarctica for the next 50 years, this was signed in 1994, i believe. It was meant to be signed in 80's but a few countries did not want to sign the treaty as antarctica has good mining oppurtunity's.in terms of who controls antarctica, Australia has the biggest portion than any other country so technically that could count as control but a couple of south American countries i believe one of them is Chile, have a large tourist trade with antarctica and are also the closest to antarctica with islands basically bordering the continent. so a country like Chile ma have more political power through those terms. It was also Chile where i believe the decleration was signed.Another AnswerSeveral countries claim territory in Antarctica, however, no claim is legitimate. The Antarctic Treaty system, signed in 1961 negates all existing claims and prohibits future claims. The continent -- and all of earth south of 60 degrees South Latitude -- is governed by the treaty.