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Antarctica, The Great White Continent
Fuelling this interest are the astonishing stories and achievements of explorers such as Mawson, Bellingshausen, Cook, Shackleton, Ross and Dumont d'Urville, to name a few, cementing the foundation stone of what is now a continent truly shared by the collective nations of the world as a place of peaceful scientific research and cooperation.
No land based vertebrate animals inhabit Antarctica and only very limited plant life can withstand this harsh climate and the winter and summer seasons that bring continuous hours of darkness and light respectively. Much however has been written on the spectacular array of sea life that abounds in the surrounding ocean. Large numbers of whales feed on the rich marine life, especially krill. Six species of seals (including the crab eater, elephant, and leopard) and about 12 species of birds live and breed in the Antarctic. The most prominent inhabitant of the Antarctic is the penguin. A flightless bird, it lives on the pack ice and in the oceans around Antarctica and breeds on the land or ice surfaces along the coast. Antarctica has some seven million cubic miles of ice, representing some 90 percent of the world's total. The ice averages one and a half miles in thickness (7,100 feet-2,164 metres), with the thickest ice being almost three miles thick (15,7000 feet-4,785 metres)
For more information please contact rwilliams@antarcticacup.com |
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