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Antarctica Case Study
Subject: Human Geography
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Antarctica Case Study
Location
● Most of Antarctica lies South of the Antarctic
circle, except from parts of the East Antarctic
Coastline and the Antarctic Peninsula (extends
Northwards from West Antarctica 63 degrees
South. It covers an area of 14 million square
kilometres. The Antarctic circle is located at 66.5
degrees South of the Equator. It is the fifth
largest continent on Earth, with 98% of it being
covered by ice and the other 2% being rock.
●East Antarctic Ice Sheet - largest of the 2 ice
sheets on Earth. It lies 45 degrees West and
168 degrees East (longitude). It holds a very
large amount of ice (enough to raise the sea
levels by 50m) and contains the thickest ice on
Earth at 15,700ft. It contains about 90% of the
mass of the whole Antarctic ice sheet.
●West Antarctic Ice Sheet - it covers the West of Antarctica, including the
Transantarctic Mountains. It is classified s a marine based ice sheet, meaning its bed
lies well below sea level. The volume of this sheet is estimated to be at least 2.2
million km3.
●Antarctic peninsula - the most northern part of mainland Antarctica, which is located
at the base of the Southern Hemisphere. It is 70 km wide, with mountains located all
along it.
Physical Geography
● Commonly described as a polar desert, with temperatures spanning from -50°C to
over -90°C, in some areas
● The average annual wind speed is 50mph, due to the convergent katabatic winds,
gales can reach up to 200mph
● There is a low annual precipitation, especially in the interior and can be lower than
50mm per annum
● The thick ice sheets are a result of the accumulation of snow in small inputs and
frost, over a long period of time.
● Much of Antarctica’s coastline is covered in ice shelves. Some of the largest include
the Ross Ice Shelf, in the Ross Sea and the Ronne Ice Shelf in the Weddell Sea and
respectively cover an area larger than the British Isles
● The Antarctic Convergence is a natural boundary that separates 2 distinct
hydrological regions, areas of climate and areas of distinctive wildlife. Its approx 32 to
48 km wide
● Virtually none of Antarctica is free of ice and these zones are due to specific local
scale factors e.g. nunataks are small areas of rock that emerge above the ice sheets
● Another type of landscape is dry valleys, which are found high altitude areas with
extreme aridity
● There is a diverse marine ecosystem surrounding Antarctica, due to warmer
temperatures in the ocean and the rising of cool water from the bottom brings
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