
No place on Earth compares to this vast white 
wilderness of elemental forces: snow, ice, water, rock. Antarctica is 
simply stunning.
History
The
 names of explorers and their sovereigns and benefactors are written on 
Antarctica’s shores. Renowned explorers from Cook to Amundsen and Scott 
all tried to penetrate this vast, mysterious land: each with varying 
degrees of success. Visitors can follow in their footsteps and imagine 
what it was like to forge through the pack ice on a creaking wooden boat
 or to haul sledges across the polar plateau. Some of the historic huts 
actually remain, preserved frozen in rime ice, to tell the story of 
adventures long past.
This
 continent, preserved by the Antarctic Treaty, is home to some of the 
world’s most extraordinary species, adapted to life in their unique 
home. Some, such as the enormous whales, migrate far and wide, while 
others, such as the Weddell seal and the emperor penguin, remain close 
to the continent. Millions of seabirds skim the 
Southern Ocean,
 the world’s most abundant, and species such as far-flung albatrosses 
and petrels circle these waters. Antarctic wildlife is generally 
unafraid of humans. Visitors usually elicit no more than an uninterested
 yawn from seals and penguins focused on rearing their young and evading
 predators. The human reaction is, ironically, exactly opposite.
Inspiration
Antarctica
 possesses an unnameable quality. Call it inspiration, call it 
grandeur…it is simply the indescribable feeling of being a small speck 
in a vast, harshly beautiful land. A land where striated ice towers 
float among geometric pancake ice, literally untouched mountains rear 
from marine mist, and wildlife lives, year in and year out, to its own 
rhythms, quite apart from human concerns. To let our minds soar in a 
place nearly free of humankind’s imprint: this is magic.
Adventure

Antarctica’s
 surreal remoteness, extreme cold, enormous ice shelves and mountain 
ranges, and myriad exotic life forms invariably challenge you to embrace
 life fully. Everyone – scientist, support worker, government official 
and tourist alike – who comes to this isolated continent, must ‘earn’ 
it, whether by sea voyage or flight. Ice and weather, not clocks and 
calendars, determine the itinerary and the timetable of all travel here.
 Expect experiences unlike any other, whether whale-watching across the 
open sea, spying a penguin rookery, or framing that perfect photograph 
of an awe-inspiring ice-form. Today, it’s even possible for visitors to 
climb Antarctic peaks or kayak icy waters. But there is nothing quite 
like the craggy crevasses of a magnificent glacier or the sheer expanse 
of the polar ice cap.
 Show in Lonely Planet
Show in Lonely Planet 
 
 
 
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