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English, 21.01.2022 20:10 gamblenyny

Identify the author’s point of view on living in the Antarctic? Use evidence from the text to justify your response. Immersive Reader Everything from food to fuel must be brought to Antarctica

1. In Antarctica, you learn not to take anything for granted. Not even things as basic as food, water, or energy. Everything people depend on has to be shipped or flown into the continent. There are no farms on the icy continent. The only plants are mosses and lichens. As for drinking water, special systems and a great deal of energy are needed to take to salt out of seawater to make it useable.

2. Then there is the matter of waste. The U. S. Antarctic Program is committed to reducing its impact—or footprint—on the Antarctic environment. That means that every bit of garbage a person might produce in a day has to be transported off the continent.

3. McMurdo Station managers remind community members to adopt the values and habits of conservation. The station has put into place technology that helps it reduce its footprint. It starts with energy. The U. S. research base has partnered with its nearby neighbor, New Zealand's Scott Base, to share energy produced from three large wind turbines. Scott Base Kiwis—as the New Zealanders are called—get 100% of their power from wind, says power-plant manager Ron Blevins, while the American base gets about 35% of its energy from wind. The much larger U. S. base uses oil-fired generators to supply the rest of its energy needs. The waste heat produced by the generators is then used to warm many of its buildings.

4. Water-plant manager Paul Jones says it takes energy and special technology to remove the salt from seawater to produce drinking water. At the South Pole Station, where snow and ice must be melted for drinking water, people are limited to two-minute showers twice a week!

5. The people who live and work in McMurdo fly into and out of the continent along with their luggage and scientific equipment. But the food and fuel, machinery and supplies that keep the town running come in by cargo ships. There is one ship that brings fuel and another ship that brings cargo. The cargo ship takes back all of the waste, from construction materials to glass, paper, plastic, and metal that has been carefully recycled. . . . It takes 10 days to unload and reload the cargo ship, and about 40 hours to unload the fuel. All fuel and supplies must be delivered during the short Antarctic summer. Nothing comes in or goes out during the long, dark Antarctic winter.

6. To live and work at the bottom of the world, whether you are there to study penguins or bake bread, requires very careful planning. And as visitors to Antarctica quickly discover, every plan always requires a backup plan—and a backup plan to the backup plan.

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Identify the author’s point of view on living in the Antarctic? Use evidence from the text to justif...

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