Refraction - bending of lights.
Yes, an okapi's tongue is long enough to reach its ears. This unique feature allows them to groom hard-to-reach areas and maintain cleanliness in the wild.
yes they are because they are the compact, portable powerful steam cleaner that cleans actually very good.Also it bends to get hard to reach places such as below the cupboard under the couch and in tight spaces.
This is a very difficult task. You must reach up the anal opening at least 4 feet. And as it will be hard to find, you may also want to stick your head in as well. And when it is located, all you have to do is pull it out. To clean off the toilet paper i recommend licking it with your tongue.
They are not hard to take care of.:)
yes :) is that all
Ernest Shackleton is my hero because he showed me if you give it all you have, you can do anything.Ernest Shackleton is my hero because he is an inspiration to me, and he taught me to never give up. On his first trip to reach the South Pole, he could not make it. He was not the captain. They were not very far when they had to turn back because of the ice. Then after a year of hard work and looking for a ship he and his crew of 28 set off for Shackleton’s second trip to the South Pole. The whalers at South Georgia Island said, “It’s a bad year for ice.”Ernest Shackleton promised his crew he would do his best to save them and he did. Ernest Shackleton was a man of integrity because he never made a promise he could not keep. One example is when he wanted to tell his crew that they would all live, but he did not because it would be a false promise.
Sir Ernest Shackleton (1874-1922) was a British explorer of the South Pole who is best remembered for leading his crew to safety after the failed expedition of the Endurance (1914-16). Shackleton had been a junior officer on Robert Falcon Scott's Discovery expedition (1902-03), and his expedition with the Nimrod (1907-09) had taken him closer to the South Pole than anyone before. After Roald Amundsen reached the Pole in 1911, Shackleton and a crew of 28 men set out in his ship Endurance in 1914, in the hopes of being the first to cross the polar continent. The ship was frozen in ice, then crushed, and Shackleton and his men set out in lifeboats after nearly a year and a half on the ice. Shackleton, known as "The Boss," took five men and sailed 800 miles in an open boat from Elephant Island to the island of South Georgia, then went back and saved the rest of his crew, all of whom survived. Almost two years after starting out, they reached safety in South America in September of 1916. In spite of his heroics, Shackleton had a hard time back in England with finances and alcohol. He eventually managed to get financing for another voyage to Antarctica in 1921, but he had a fatal heart attack at South Georgia Island and never made it.
Land on any continent is hard, and Antarctica is a continent.
It's hard to say who the most famous Antarctic explorer was. A few of them are very famous. One of the most famous is Admiral Richard Evelyn Byrd. Others are Ernest Shackleton, Roald Amundsen, and Robert Falcon Scott.
There is no mining in Antarctica, per the Antarctic Treaty.
Did you know...Seals can live in oceans as well as freshwater lakes, such as the Lake Baikal in Russia. However, most seals live in and around Antarctica and the Arctic Circle. Antarctica is so cold that it has no permanent land mammals, but six species of seals have found ways to live in the Antarctic Ocean. Many seals live in locations that are hard for humans to reach, such as Antarctica and the Arctic.
Hard is a judgement and you are the judge. If you are not skilled, equipped or prepared to complete tasks related to a job, then, the job might be hard. Otherwise, working in Antarctica is considered by most, as a privilege.
The Adelia Penguin is a native of Antarctica and is protected. It is the smallest of all of the penguins on Antarctica, weighing about 4 kg and standing about 70 cm tall. They are considered to be common on Antarctica.
very hard
it must be hard. that's what she said.
It's going to be pretty hard, as it is on Antarctica.