Oops, I meant habitable by human beings, I thought that was obvious. Sure, it was once elsewhere and had a different climate. But that was a very long time ago, when dinosaurs lived there.archaeologist wrote:let's not go thereThe geological evidence from Antarctica shows that it has never been habitable
http://octopus.gma.org/surfing/antarcti ... ctica.htmlPlant and animal fossils and coal beds indicate it was once warm here
not a website that i can agree with but it indicates that there was life there at one time.
one would have to be able to explain how the ice got there and was able to become so thick with the following:
seeing that we have another land mass with ice as thick as or almost as thick as anarctica, and is partially habitable we can come to the conclusion that the antarctica could have been habitable in the near past. there is no logical, evolutionary theory wthat would satisfy the ice forming and remaining frozen for such a long time. toomany assumptionshave to be made to evenattempt to make such explanations credible.Antarctica is a continent of contradictions: volcanoes erupting from a frozen landscape; miles of snow and ice, yet hardly any snow falls each year; an arid land surrounded by three oceans.
What don't you agree with about the web site?
What does evolution have to do with the length of time that Antarctica has been at the south pole and frozen over?
And how do you reach the conclusion Antarctica was habitable in the near past?