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Does Anyone Live In Antarctica?
Whats the deal with Antarctica? Do people live there? Is it part of any country? And how is it possible that weâve only known about this place for the last couple hundred years? Antarctica is the last big unknown piece of land thatâs left in the world. And it doesnât have polar bears.
Quick Background: Antarctica is a giant continent. itâs actually bigger than Europe and Australia. Itâs also the coldest, driest, and windiest. Unlike its cousin in the north â the Arctic Circle - Antarctica is for the most part a freezing, icy, and mountaneous piece of land. The Arctic Circle, on the other hand, is actually mostly frozen ocean. Antarctica is a different beast â its much more massive, much more freezing, and much more inhospitable. And again, no polar bears (only the arctic has polar bears!).
So whatâs the deal? Do people live there?
The answer is yes people live there, but also no they donâtâŠ
Today, there can be as many as 5000 people that reside there, some for a year or more, but most experts donât consider that a permanent population. (which begs the question, whatâs a permanent population? Arenât we all living somewhere for a specific amount of time?)⊠hereâs how we got to this point:
Even though most other places have been populated for 1000s of years, if not 100s of 1000s of years, it doesnât look like any human set foot on Antarctica until about 200 years ago. (Compare that with the Artic Circle which has evidence of humans going back some 50,000 years). That makes Antarctica one of the newest, most unexplored, and most unfamiliar places on the planet.
The first sign of any human there is from 1819 (found so far).That finding was the skull of an indigenous woman that came from southern Chile. She was probably part of a hunting group. But itâs still a cool mystery because thereâs no evidence of women from that area hunting before. (cool mystery.. get it?)
The idea of Antarctica has been around for a long time tho. The name Antarctic â meaning the opposite of the Arctic â has been used since the 2nd century. The Arctic Circle has had settlements since antiquity, so it seemed only logical to the ancient Greeks that there would be an opposite pole on the other end that just has been found yet (turns out the Ancient Greeks were right about a lot of things). So thereâs a long long history of people searching for this âother end.â Maps from as early as the 5th century show some kind of land in the southern pole, and by the 1400s, mapmakers were calling it âTerra Australisâ (Southern Land) and regularly including it on world maps, even though no one had actually seen it yet. (âaustralisâ sound familiar? Yeah, itâs what Europeans ended up calling Australia).
Most of the initial discoveries of Antarctica started from ships that got lost⊠blown off course and landing on some unknown ice sheet in the middle of the ocean. From the 1800s to mid 1900s, lots of expeditions set out to explore (âTHE HEROIC AGE OF EXPLORATIONâ LIST MAJOR EXPLORATIONS)âŠ. Norwegians, Brits, Americans, Russians, French, Dutch, Swedish, German, Japanese â it was like a whoâs who of colonizers.
The first known built settlement were two buildings built in 1899 by a British expedition (the Southern Cross Expedition). They still exist today and are therefore the only place left in the world where you can still see the first human structure ever built on an entire continent (Borchgrevink's / SOUTHERN CROSS HUTS). In fact, a lot of the original explorers huts and cabins are still standing all over âyou could say they are frozen in time.
(including the infamous Ernest Shackleton âEnduranceâ expedition, where they got stuck, survived for months on ice, and went 800 miles in a small rowboat to save everyone. if you havenât heard about, I highly recommend you look up).
The oldest continually inhabited place is a weather base built in 1903 and manned year-round since 1904. Which would make it the oldest permanent settlement on the entire continent.
Lots of governments and agencies have built bases and research stations and camps all over the continent since then. There are about 70 different settlements operated by about 30 different countries now. Some are pretty big. The USâs McMurdo Station, usually the largest, fits up to 1258 people in what basically operates like a small ice city. It has over 85 buildings, a harbor, airport, a store, coffee shop, and 2 ATMs. There are great documentaries about life living at McMurdo.
Some fun Cliffnotes include:
Thereâs a disproportionate amount of costume parties and even a concert festival
Pregnancy is pretty tightly controlled so apparently thereâs also a disproportionate amount of personal protective equipment.
Theres 3 bars in the summer but alcohol can get rationed â hey you never know when you might need it.
And Thereâs 24 hours of sunlight in the summer and 24 hours of darkness in the winter, so that explains a lot of the facts just mentioned.
In addition to McMurdo, thereâs lots of other settlements. Most are far from each other, but some you can walk between (show the close ones). Almost everything is for research, but thereâs at least 2 that are considered âcivilian basesâ (they house families of workers stationed there and at least one of them requires that you get an appendectomy before moving there)
All of them operate cooperatively under a treaty made in the 1960s. Itâs actually one of the most widely adopted and generally followed international agreements still in existence. Hereâs the deal: antarctica is used for scientific purposes only â thereâs no military anything allowed (except for logistical support) â and everyone agrees to put aside territorial claims to promote scientific cooperation. The Treaty currently has 54 signatories, which makes up more than 80% of the worldâs population. That makes Antarctica the only non-militarized continent, the only continent without a war, and the only place where 54 countries can agree to not care about borders.
That said, a lot of countries have staked out their borders in the Antarctic. Theyâre all gearing up for when it becomes more than just a science mission. 7 nations currently working there have declared portions of the continent to be theirs. Itâs mostly cut by longitude lines so the borders look like an artisanal pie. None of these claims mean much while the Treaty is in effect. But they could have real-world consequences if or when the place becomes valuable land.
Even though they all cooperate, every nation knows whatâs going on under the surface. Argentina actually sent a pregnant woman to their base in 1977. Why? Because they got the first recorded child born on the continent. Not to be outdone, Chile sent a married couple to their base so they could have the first child conceived on the continent. Thatâs all true. There have been 11 babies born on Antarctica â apparently all of them are either Argentinian or Chilean.
Thereâs a huge amount that we donât know about this place, and a huge amount we can learn thatâs saved frozen in its ice. Thereâs new discoveries every year, including a recent one in 2021 that found 60 million fish nesting under the iceâ by far the largest breeding colony ever found â and they thought barely anything lived there before.
So does anyone live there? Probably not before a century ago. But we know that up to 5000 people can be there now, some for years, and some even having babies. Thereâs enough people for bars, a coffee shop, and costume parties. And thereâs enough activity for almost 100 distinct settlements and the need for an international treaty to manage it all.
Iâm no expert, but to me, it sounds a lot like people live there. What do you think?