What is the weather like on the place you live? Do you have to face extreme weather situations? How do you think living in Antarctica or the Sahara desert would be like? I thought something like this might interest you. That is why in here you can find a small article about how life in Antarctica is like.
Antarctica was once a part of a larger land mass called Gondwana that settled over the South Pole and split from Australasia and South America long before humans evolved. There haven’t been any land bridges to Antarctica for around 35 million years.
Humans are thought to have evolved in East Africa very recently in geological terms (no more than 5 million years at most) We then left the ancestral homeland and moved across all of the continents of the world.
Antarctica was already too isolated by distance, climate and the storminess of its seas for primitive peoples to discover. It wasn’t until 1820 when human technology and navigation was sophisticated enough to allow anyone to sail far enough south to even see Antarctica for the first time. There are a number of poorly substantiated claims of setting foot upon the Antarctic mainland between 1820 and 1899, the latter date being the first date accepted by some historians. When the first people did set foot on Antarctica there wasn’t anyone already there.
Antarctica is therefore one of the few places in the world that can truly be described as having been discovered, rather than people living there already who had known about it for hundreds or thousands of years before its “discovery”.
The people who travel to or live in Antarctica fall into two main groups, those who live and work on scientific research stations or bases and tourists.
No-one lives in Antarctica indefinitely in the way that they do in the rest of the world. It has no industries, no towns or cities, no permanent residents.
The only “settlements” with longer term residents (measured in months or more) are scientific bases. These vary in size, but typically have 50 people there in the summer and 15-20 in the winter (Antarctica is never really talked about as having spring or autumn/fall), summer lasts from October/November to March/April, the rest of the year is considered to be winter.
There are around 66 scientific bases in Antarctica, of which about 37 are occupied year round. There are about 4000 people through the summer months and about 1000 overwinter each year.
Most people do a “summer only” this is about November to April, with a lesser number staying over the Antarctic winter (when any chance of transport in or out is virtually impossible). A typical tour is one winter and two summers, around 15 months in total (this time is continuous with no visits home or elsewhere in the meantime). It used to be quite common for some to stay for two winters and three summers, though this is very rare now.
Some people have had an “enforced” winter, this is when ice conditions mean the ship that should have come to get them couldn’t get through and had to go home without them until next year. The result is a wait from April until October / November or later when the ship can get through again. This means three summers and three winters in a row!
There is a US base at McMurdo sound that has up to 1000 personnel at the peak time, this is the nearest there is to a town. With such rapid turn-over of people, Antarctic bases are more like oil-rigs or military bases than towns.
As you can see, humans are now living in one of the most remote places of our planet and are facing the most critical and extreme conditions for the human body. Would you dare experimenting a life in this place?
Taken from: http://www.coolantarctica.com/Antarctica%20fact%20file/science/can_you_live_in_antarctica.php
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