Antarctica

Introduction

ANTARCTICA is the FIFTH LARGEST continent but the COLDEST, WINDIEST, and DRIEST place on Earth. It is a continent of ICE — covered by a VAST ice sheet that holds 70% of the world's FRESH WATER. There are NO permanent human residents, NO countries, and NO cities. Antarctica is a CONTINENT for SCIENCE — dedicated to PEACEFUL research under the Antarctic Treaty.

1. Location and Size

FeatureDescription
Area14.2 million sq km (5th largest)
Population0 permanent residents; 1,000–5,000 SCIENTISTS in summer
Highest pointVINSON MASSIF (4,892 m)
Deepest ice4,776 m (under the ice sheet)
Average thickness of ice2,160 m
Volume of ice26.5 MILLION cubic km

Location

  • Centred on the SOUTH POLE
  • Surrounded by the SOUTHERN OCEAN
  • The ANTARCTIC CIRCLE (66.5°S) passes through the continent
  • Antarctica is the MOST SOUTHERN continent on Earth
  • It is SURROUNDED by the Southern Ocean — the COLDEST and STORMIEST ocean in the world

2. Climate — The Extreme Continent

ElementDescription
TemperatureCOLDEST continent; average –49°C in winter
Record low–89.2°C at Vostok Station (1983) — WORLD'S LOWEST TEMPERATURE
Summer temp–30°C to 0°C (on coast); still BELOW freezing inland
Winter temp–60°C to –80°C (inland)
WindSTRONGEST on Earth — katabatic winds up to 320 km/h
PrecipitationEXTREMELY low — less than 50 mm/year (a POLAR DESERT)
DaylightSIX MONTHS of daylight (summer); SIX MONTHS of darkness (winter)

Why is Antarctica So Cold?

ReasonExplanation
LatitudeAt the SOUTH POLE — receives very LITTLE direct sunlight
High altitudeAntarctica has the HIGHEST AVERAGE elevation of any continent
Ice albedoWHITE ICE reflects 80–90% of sunlight back into space
Polar nightSIX MONTHS of DARKNESS in winter — no solar heating
IsolationSurrounded by OCEAN — no warm air currents reach it

Antarctica — A Polar Desert

Despite being covered in ICE, Antarctica is a DESERT — it receives LESS than 50 mm of precipitation per year. The ice has ACCUMULATED over MILLIONS of years because it NEVER melts.

3. The Ice Sheet

Features of the Antarctic Ice Sheet

FeatureDescription
Size14 million sq km — covers 98% of the continent
ThicknessAverage 2,160 m; maximum 4,776 m
Volume26.5 million cubic km — 70% of world's FRESH WATER
WeightSo HEAVY it has pushed the land BELOW sea level in many areas
MovementIce SLOWLY moves from centre towards the coast — ICE STREAMS

Ice Shelves

  • Floating ICE attached to the coastline
  • Ross Ice Shelf: LARGEST — size of FRANCE
  • Ronne-Filchner Ice Shelf: Second largest
  • Ice shelves BREAK off (CALVING) to form ICEBERGS

Icebergs

  • Huge chunks of ice that BREAK off from ice shelves or glaciers
  • Antarctic icebergs can be ENORMOUS — the largest was 11,000 sq km
  • Only 10% of an iceberg is VISIBLE above water

Global Warming and Ice Melt

  • Antarctica is LOSING ice at an ACCELERATING rate
  • If ALL Antarctic ice melted, sea levels would RISE by 60 m
  • This would FLOOD coastal cities worldwide

4. Wildlife

Despite the EXTREME cold, Antarctica supports REMARKABLE wildlife — mostly along the COAST. No LAND mammals live here permanently. All animals are ADAPTED to the cold.

Penguins

SpeciesFeatures
EMPEROR penguinLARGEST (1.2 m tall); breeds in WINTER (the ONLY animal that does)
ADELIE penguinMost COMMON on the Antarctic coast
CHINSTRAP penguinBlack line under the chin
GENTOO penguinRed-orange beak and feet
KING penguinVERY similar to Emperor but slightly SMALLER

Emperor Penguin Adaptations:

  • Layers of SCALES and FAT for insulation
  • HUDDLE together for warmth (can be 50°C warmer inside the huddle)
  • Males INCUBATE eggs on their FEET for 65 days in –60°C
  • They go WITHOUT food for 4 months during the breeding cycle

Seals

SpeciesFeatures
WEDDELL sealMost SOUTHERN seal; can DIVE 600 m deep
CRABEATER sealMost COMMON seal; eats KRILL (not crabs)
LEOPARD sealPREDATOR — eats penguins and other seals
ROSS sealRAREST — lives on PACK ICE
SOUTHERN ELEPHANT sealLARGEST — males weigh up to 4,000 kg

Whales

SpeciesFeatures
BLUE whaleLARGEST animal EVER — up to 30 m long; feeds on KRILL
KILLER whale (Orca)APEX predator; hunts in PODS; eats seals, penguins
HUMPBACK whaleKnown for its SONG and spectacular BREACHING
MINKE whaleSMALLEST baleen whale in Antarctic waters

Krill

KRILL are SMALL shrimp-like CRUSTACEANS — the FOUNDATION of the Antarctic food web. They are MILLIONS of tons in the Southern Ocean. ALL Antarctic animals depend directly or indirectly on KRILL.

Other Life

OrganismDescription
ALGAEGrow on SNOW (pink or green patches)
LICHENS and MOSSESOnly 'plants' that survive in Antarctica
MICROBESFound in ICE and DRY VALLEYS — surviving in EXTREME conditions
SEA birdsALBATROSS, PETRELS, SKUA (which preys on penguin chicks)

5. Research Stations

StationCountryLocationFeatures
McMurdoUSARoss IslandLARGEST station; 1,000+ people in summer
HalleyUKBrunt Ice ShelfFamous for OZONE HOLE research
VostokRussiaInland (3,488 m elevation)Recorded LOWEST temperature (−89.2°C)
Amundsen-ScottUSASOUTH POLEAt the geographic South Pole
MaitriINDIASchirmacher OasisIndia's second station (operational since 1989)
BharatiINDIALarsemann HillsIndia's THIRD station (operational since 2012)
DavisAustraliaPrincess Elizabeth LandOldest Australian station

India in Antarctica

StationYears ActiveSignificance
Dakshin Gangotri1983–1990India's FIRST station; now a SUPPLY base
Maitri1989–presentIndia's MAIN research station
Bharati2012–presentMODERN station; advanced research facilities

India's Antarctic program began with the FIRST Indian Expedition in 1981. India is a SIGNATORY to the Antarctic Treaty and has CONSULTATIVE STATUS.

6. The Antarctic Treaty (1959)

Background

TWELVE countries (including India, which joined later) signed the ANTARCTIC TREATY in 1959. It came into effect in 1961.

Key Provisions

ProvisionDescription
PEACEFUL useAntarctica can be used ONLY for PEACEFUL purposes
No military activityNO military bases, weapons testing, or nuclear explosions
FREEDOM of scienceSCIENTIFIC research is FREE and OPEN
No territorial claimsNo NEW territorial claims while treaty is in force
Environmental protectionALL activities must protect the ENVIRONMENT
BAN on miningMining is PROHIBITED (Madrid Protocol, 1991)

Significance

  • Antarctica is the ONLY continent with NO WAR
  • It is DEDICATED entirely to PEACEFUL scientific research
  • The treaty is a MODEL for INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION

ICSE Exam Focus

2-mark questions

  • Why is Antarctica called a 'POLAR DESERT'?
  • Name any TWO penguin species found in Antarctica.
  • What is the ANTARCTIC TREATY?

4-mark questions

  • Why is Antarctica the COLDEST continent?
  • Describe the WILDLIFE of Antarctica.
  • What is the SIGNIFICANCE of the Antarctic Treaty?

6-mark (essay) questions

  • 'Antarctica is a continent for SCIENCE, not for politics.' Discuss.
  • Describe the CLIMATE, ICE SHEET, and WILDLIFE of Antarctica.

Self-Test

  1. Why is Antarctica considered a DESERT despite having so much ice? Answer: Antarctica receives LESS than 50 mm of precipitation per year — even LESS than the Sahara Desert. It is a 'POLAR DESERT' because the extreme cold keeps the air VERY DRY.

  2. How do EMPEROR PENGUINS survive the extreme Antarctic winter? Answer: They HUDDLE together in large groups (rotating positions so each penguin spends time in the WARM centre). They have THICK layers of fat and scales. Males incubate eggs on their FEET, keeping them warm for 65 days without food.

  3. What is the ANTARCTIC TREATY? Why is it important? Answer: Signed in 1959, the treaty ensures Antarctica is used ONLY for PEACEFUL purposes and SCIENTIFIC research. It BANS military activity, nuclear testing, and mining. It is a MODEL of international cooperation.

  4. What are INDIA'S research stations in Antarctica? Answer: India has three stations: DAKSHIN GANGOTRI (1983–1990, now a supply base), MAITRI (1989–present, main station), and BHARATI (2012–present, modern facility).

  5. What is an ICE SHELF? Name TWO major ones in Antarctica. Answer: An ice shelf is a THICK platform of FLOATING ice attached to the coastline. The two largest are the ROSS ICE SHELF (size of France) and the RONNE-FILCHNER ICE SHELF.

  6. How does MELTING of Antarctic ice affect the world? Answer: Antarctica holds 70% of the world's FRESH WATER. If it ALL melted, sea levels would RISE by 60 m, FLOODING coastal cities worldwide. Even PARTIAL melting will cause significant sea level rise and CLIMATE disruption.

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