Antarctica is a frozen continent. Most of the continent is perpetually covered in snow, so the continent is so cold that precipitation cannot occur. It is, in fact, the world's driest continent, and consequently the world's largest desert.
By contrast, there is no typical weather in Australia.
There is a great deal of variety of weather in Australia due to the fact that it is a vast continent of comparable size to the United states, barring Alaska. Most of the continent lies within the temperate zone, but northern Queensland and the Top End of the Northern Territory experience tropical and sub-tropical weather, with monsoonal rains and cyclones during the summer. This area experiences just two seasons: wet and dry.
By contrast, Tasmania and parts of Victoria can experience both very cool summer temperatures, then sudden jumps to extreme heat. In the centre of the country are dry, desert regions with high daytime temperatures and low amounts of rain.
It is also very dry throughout southern Australia in summer - as witnessed through the tragic bushfires that killed over 100 in Victoria (February 2009). Australia experiences droughts for long periods of time, and associated heatwaves. Yet, at the same time people were losing their lives and homes in Victoria, others along the northern coast of Queensland were losing their homes to floods, with the promise of even more rain to come. Brisbane and regions north along the eastern side of the Great Dividing Range are prone to sudden thunderstorms in summer. Inconsistency is the catchword in Australia - for example, Melbourne and southern Victoria can easily switch from hot and dry one day to cold and wet the next.
Very few places in Australia experience snow, compared to the size of the continent. In Winter, snow falls in the Alpine regions of New South Wales and Victoria, and sometimes even in the central tablelands of NSW, near the Blue Mountains and Orange. Tasmania experiences some snow, as does Canberra, less frequently. To show what an unusual country Australia is, snow has even been known to fall in the southern tablelands of Queensland, Australia's "Sunshine State".
The temperature in Australia changes with the seasons, but in general it ranges between highs of 50 degrees Celsius to lows of sub-zero temperatures. These are extremes. Generally, much of Australia ranges between 10 degrees Celsius and 30 degrees Celsius at different times of the year. The lowest temperatures reached in Australia, however, are not comparable to the extreme lows experienced in other continents. This is partly because Australia lacks very high mountains and enjoys the presence of warming oceans around its coastal regions.
Antarctica is a continent right around the South Pole. Perhaps You ment Arctica which ages ago was a continent in the North pole but now is just a region.
its cold freezing
also note, it is not a country, it is an uninhabited continent (with a few scientific research stations)
it is usually freezing in Antarctica.
many countries try to fix the hole. Montreal protocol is a treaty for the same.
The two countries that are smaller in land area than Antarctica is Australia, and Europe
Antarctica has the fewest number of nations, as it has none.
Why is the weather hotter in different in other countries
The Arctic Circle runs through Alaska, Canada, Greenland, Iceland (just), Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia. The Antarctic Circle crosses only Antarctica.
There are no countries in Antarctica. Antarctica does not have any real countries, some countries on other continents have territory that they have laid claim to there, but there are no real countries on Antarctica, it is just a continent that is basically uninhabited other than research stations, and penguins.There are no countries in Antarctica
There are no countries mining in Antarctica. Amongst other things, the Antarctic Treaty prevents mining in Antarctica.
You always stop at other countries, because there is no commercial aviation to Antarctica.
no national debt.
There are no states in Antarctica. It's all just one continent. There are different areas claimed by different countries and some of these claims overlap each other. Claims have no meaning, however, according to the Antarctic Treaty, which holds all claims in abeyance.
It has 12 countries working there, but I do not know it is "owned" by any of them.
Several South American countries claim portions of Antarctica, but no country controls the continent, including other countries in the world that also claim portions of Antarctica.
Antarctica is the continent south of all other countries and continents.
There are no countries in Antarctica.
There are no countries in Antarctica.
There are no countries in Antarctica.
There is no indigenous population in Antarctica. Researchers and other residents in Antarctica eat the foods traditional to their own home countries.