Antarctica Has Captured Imagination of Both Real and Armchair Explorers
November 27, 2010 by Andrew Walker
Filed under Travel
Having worked at Atigun Pass, the highest point on the Trans Alaska pipeline, this gentleman rather likes the snow and cold. Shivering with delight, this retired engineer wanted to hear more about the plans of the local university’s alumni group who wanted to get into a cool Antarctica adventure! I thought, that sounds like a great idea. Mesmerizing both real and armchair explorers, Antarctica proves to be a place worth visiting despite freezing temperatures and little hospitality.
Antarctica Could Turn Out To Be A Wealthy Continent
November 26, 2010 by David Brown
Filed under Vacation
Cordoned off as a realm only for international scientific endeavors, Antarctica offers countless opportunities for research that can not be obtained anywhere else on the globe. There is a large ice sheet which covers the majority of the land mass and also serves as a permanent series of floating ice shelves which cover hundreds of miles into the sea. The greatest one of these shelves, the Ross Ice Shelf, turns out to be almost as big as Texas. Current measurements taken show that the edge of this ice mass moves north at approximately 1800 feet each year.
Travel to the Icy Dominion
November 26, 2010 by Joshua Harrison
Filed under Travel
If you are tired of the usual vacation destinations like Canada and Mexico, come see Antarctica. An increased number of tourists have come to this cold, barren continent in the past few years. After studying Antarctica in school, we seem to forget about the cold continent.
Where the Jackaroo Roams
November 20, 2010 by Anthony Ford
Filed under Vacation
{Western Australia features a wild, untouched side of the Commonwealth. |Inward from the coast of Western Australia is a land virtually undamaged by modernity. |Virtually unaffected by the dirt of civilization lies a land in the Commonwealth, just beyond the coastline of Western Australia. }{After your plane lands, you must trek through the sweltering 9AM heat to the only hotel in Derby, Western Australia. |From the air-conditioned plane you step into a heat unbearable even at 9AM and make your way to the only hotel in Derby, Western Australia. |Alighting from the plane means stepping into an overwhelming 9AM heat to fight your way to the sole hotel in Derby, Western Australia. }{No one can be found in either the dining room or the office. |Strange that no help is available, not in the office, not in the dining room. |Service can be found from no one, neither in the dining room nor in the office. }
Papua New Guinea A Place Everyone Should Visit
October 22, 2010 by Daniel Rivera
Filed under Vacation
Papua New Guinea filled with many spectacles that will give its visitors a new experience also offers a whole new adventure. Scenes that are masked with mists creating islands in the clouds are what gets can except in this third world country. One of Australia’s final destinations, spanning 180,508 square miles with a culture of about 4.5 million, is stationed just north of Australia’s East Coast. Papua New Guinea present visitors with an adventure like no other when they take a trip here.
Why The Kimberley Is Exceptional
October 22, 2010 by Jacob Hill
Filed under Vacation
Known as Australia’s boundary, The Kimberley is a where you can find strong men, stronger women, and crocodiles that are not afraid of them. With the arrival of different foreigners eager to see what Australia has to offer, many locations in the continent have modernized to welcome these tourists. The Kimberley is a one of a kind place and hardly any other place in Australia comes close to what it has to offer.
Living Beings Are In All Corners Of The Antarctic
October 22, 2010 by Abigail Hayes
Filed under Travel
The farthest-south living animal is a pink mite. It measures around 1/100 of an inch in length. This little critter that looks a lot like a spider likes to eat algae and fungi. An entomologist from Hawaii recently discovered this mite only 309 miles from the South Pole. A mere 266 miles from that same pole, lichens were discovered, easily the southernmost living thing ever to be discovered.
Creative Plato Descriptions
October 19, 2010 by Isabella Ramirez
Filed under Vacation
Speculations about the Atlantis empire have surfaced in many kinds of books not to mention movies. There is no explanation as to where it is or what it was. Such evidence is certain The interest of professional researchers and amateur sleuths when it comes to Atlantis remains as strong as ever, even when it was mentioned in passage in Timaeus and Critias, two dialogues written by Plato, a Greek philosopher in 360 BC. A topic like this translates to 438 titles from an online bookstore. It was Disney that released Atlantis The Lost Empire which was a full feature film.
Mud And Rocks Are Full Of Sense
October 9, 2010 by Andrew Phillips
Filed under Vacation
Everyday mud and rocks is what the things inside the bags and plastic vials would seem to someone not in the know. From the Larsen Ice Shelf in Antarctica came such specimens and the scientists will have their hands full with these. Something as simple as mud can provide much data, according to a college senior. Antarctica was visited by people belonging to one college and a university that received funding from the National Science Foundation and this college senior was part of it. Actually, these schools regularly take part in research cruises of all sorts.
From A 707 To A Jumbo
October 9, 2010 by Olivia Murray
Filed under Travel
Any location is a good location for travel. It was in February 13, 1877 when one Australian businessman and brainstormer came up with an idea to organize the first Antarctic charter flight in the world after considering this thought. As he was looking at a map one morning, this active 33 year old electronic executive thought to himself why a regular plane cannot accomplish a trip to Antarctica that returns to Sydney on the same day.




