Is there a tree in Antarctica?

There are no trees or shrubs, and only two species of flowering plants are found: Antarctic hair grass (Deschampsia antarctica) and Antarctic pearlwort (Colobanthus quitensis). These occur on the South Orkney Islands, the South Shetland Islands and along the western Antarctic Peninsula.
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Why is there no trees in Antarctica?

There are no trees in Antarctica because it is both too cold and too dry for them to grow.
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What trees grow in Antarctica?

Only two species of vascular plants are found on the entire continent: Antarctic hair grass and Antarctic pearlwort. What sets these apart from other plants, like mosses, lichens, and fungi, is their ability to photosynthesize through their vascular system.
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Are there trees under the ice in Antarctica?

Related: In photos: Fossil forest unearthed in the Arctic

The rainforest's remains were discovered under the ice in a sediment core that a team of international researchers collected from a seabed near Pine Island Glacier in West Antarctica in 2017.
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Is there a forest in Antarctica?

Scientists have discovered remnants of a swampy temperate rainforest that thrived in Antarctica about 90 million years ago. They were surprised to find fossil remnants of this forest in a sediment core sample retrieved in February 2017 from the ocean floor in the Amundsen Sea off the coast of West Antarctica.
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Trees Discovered In Antartica



What did Antarctica look like before ice?

But before Antarctica's deep freeze 34 million years ago, the valley was relatively flat and filled by a lazy river, leaving a riddle for geologists to decode: How did Lambert Graben get so steep, and when was it carved? The key to Lambert Graben's history was found in layers of sediments just offshore, in Prydz Bay.
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Are there trees in North Pole?

Because of permafrost and a short growing season, the Arctic does not provide suitable habitat for tall trees. Any North Pole trees that do exist are dwarf trees. Some examples of trees in the North Pole include birches and willows. One species of North Pole tree is the Arctic willow (​Salix arctica​).
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Does it rain in Antarctica?

It does not rain or snow a lot there. When it snows, the snow does not melt and builds up over many years to make large, thick sheets of ice, called ice sheets. Antarctica is made up of lots of ice in the form of glaciers, ice shelves and icebergs. Antarctica has no trees or bushes.
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Could there be dinosaurs frozen in Antarctica?

Possibly - but neither dinosaurs nor woolly mammoths. Antarctica froze over about 34 million years ago, which is long after extinction of the dinosaurs (other than their avian descendants) some 60 million years ago. However glacial movement severely restricts where any such might be found.
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Did dinosaurs live in Antarctica?

Animal fossils

Dinosaurs lived in Antarctica and are well known from the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, although few have been described formally. They include ankylosaurs (the armoured dinosaurs), mosasaurs and plesiosaurs (both marine reptilian groups).
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What eats Antarctic hair grass?

The antarctic hair grass can take some abuse. Not only will it have to survive the cold winds but it will also have to survive another threat, elephant seals and penguins. The penguins and the seals don't actually eat the hair grass but they trample them.
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Who owns the Antarctic?

People from all over the world undertake research in Antarctica, but Antarctica is not owned by any one nation. Antarctica is governed internationally through the Antarctic Treaty system. The Antarctic Treaty was signed in 1959 by 12 countries who had scientists in and around Antarctica at the time.
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When was Antarctica last free of ice?

Antarctica hasn't always been covered with ice – the continent lay over the south pole without freezing over for almost 100 million years. Then, about 34 million years ago, a dramatic shift in climate happened at the boundary between the Eocene and Oligocene epochs.
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What is beneath the Antarctic?

The ice cap that covers Antarctica isn't a rigid whole. Researchers in Antarctica have discovered in recent years hundreds of interconnected liquid lakes and rivers cradled within the ice itself. But this is the first time the presence of large amounts of liquid water in below-ice sediments has been found.
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How did Antarctica freeze?

The polar ice caps melted for a while after that and it wasn't until Africa and Antarctica separated around 160 million years ago that it began to cool again. By 23 million years ago, Antarctica was mostly icy forest and for the last 15 million years, it has been a frozen desert under a thick ice sheet.
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Can anything grow in Antarctica?

Also in Antarctic wildlife

There are no trees or shrubs, and only two species of flowering plants are found: Antarctic hair grass (Deschampsia antarctica) and Antarctic pearlwort (Colobanthus quitensis). These occur on the South Orkney Islands, the South Shetland Islands and along the western Antarctic Peninsula.
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What lived on Antarctica before it froze?

Before becoming frozen wasteland, Antarctica was home to frogs.
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Can I live in Antarctica?

No-one lives in Antarctica indefinitely in the way that they do in the rest of the world. It has no commercial industries, no towns or cities, no permanent residents. The only "settlements" with longer term residents (who stay for some months or a year, maybe two) are scientific bases.
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How warm was the Earth during the dinosaurs?

The Cretaceous period is an archetypal example of a greenhouse climate. Atmospheric pCO2 levels reached as high as about 2,000 ppmv, average temperatures were roughly 5°C–10°C higher than today, and sea levels were 50–100 meters higher [O'Brien et al., 2017; Tierney et al., 2020].
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What does Antarctica smell like?

Oddly enough, there are very few smells in Antarctica. Ice and snow have no smell, and in the cold temperatures, everyday objects hold onto their aromatic chemicals. So that when you stumble into an aroma, it stands out like a black volcanic rock on a snowfield.
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Is it ever warm in Antarctica?

Along the Antarctic Peninsula, temperatures as high as 18.3 °C (64.9 °F) have been recorded, though the summer temperature is below 0 °C (32 °F) most of the time. Severe low temperatures vary with latitude, elevation, and distance from the ocean.
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What is the coldest place on Earth?

Where is the coldest place on Earth?
  • Eastern Antarctic Plateau, Antarctica (-94°C) ...
  • Vostok Station Antarctica (-89.2°C) ...
  • Amundsen-Scott Station, Antarctica (-82.8°C) ...
  • Denali, Alaska, United States of America (-73°C) ...
  • Klinck station, Greenland (-69.6°C) ...
  • Oymyakon, Siberia, Russia (-67.7°C)
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Is there grass on Antarctica?

Although Antarctica is a cold, dry, and desolate place, life always finds a way. Currently, there are only two known species of flowering plants found on the continent: Antarctic hair grass (Deschamsia antarctica) grows primarily in the Antarctic Peninsula in small, concentrated tufts throughout rocky areas.
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When did Antarctica last have trees?

At only three to five million years old, they were some of the last plants to have lived on the continent before the deep freeze set in. However, other fossils show that truly subtropical forests existed on Antarctica during even earlier times.
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When was the last tree in Antarctica?

Antarctica did have plant life until about 14 million years ago and would have looked similar to what Siberia looks like today. Ancient trees were able to transition from season to season much quicker than modern day plants and trees.
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