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1990
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<text>
<title>
(Jan. 15, 1990) Antarctica
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Jan. 15, 1990 Antarctica
</history>
<link 00017>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ENVIRONMENT, Page 56
Antarctica
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Once inaccessible and pristine, the white continent is now
threatened by spreading pollution, budding tourism and the
world's thirst for oil
</p>
<p>By Michael D. Lemonick/McMurdo Station
</p>
<p> From atop a windswept hill, the panoramic landscape looks
eerily beautiful--and yet completely hostile to life. Even
at the height of summer, the scene is one of frigid desolation.
To the west lies a saltwater bay whose surface is frozen solid.
Beyond the bay loom glittering glaciers and towering, rocky
peaks. On the south and east rises a blinding white shelf of
permanent ice, so thick that it grinds against the seabed far
below. And to the north is a snow-covered volcano that
continuously belches noxious fumes. This is the bottom of the
world, where winds can reach 320 kph (200 m.p.h.) and
temperatures can plunge below -85 degrees C (-121 degrees F).
This is Antarctica, the white continent, the harshest, most
forbidding land on earth.
</p>
<p> But the view from the hilltop, overlooking McMurdo Sound on
the eastern side of Antarctica, is deceiving. A closer look at
the seemingly lifeless land- and seascape reveals an amazing
abundance of life. Like most of the coastal waters around the
continent, McMurdo Sound is filled with plankton and fish, and
its thick ice is perforated by the breathing holes of Weddell
seals. Nearby Cape Royds is home to thousands of Adelie
penguins, which hatch their eggs in the world's southernmost
rookery. Skuas--seagull-like scavenger birds--scout the
breathing holes and the margins between sea ice and land,
seeking seal carcasses and unguarded baby penguins to feast on.
The ice itself is permeated with algae and bacteria.
</p>
<p> There is another sort of life as well. All around Antarctica
the coast is dotted with corrugated-metal buildings,
oil-storage tanks and garbage dumps--unmistakable signs of
man. No fewer than 16 nations have established permanent bases
on the only continent that belongs to the whole world. They
were set up mainly to conduct scientific research, but they
have become magnets for boatloads of tourists, who come to gawk
at the peaks and the penguins. Environmentalists fear that
miners and oil drillers may not be far behind. Already the
human invaders of Antarctica have created an awful mess in what
was only recently the world's cleanest spot. Over the years,
they have spilled oil into the seas, dumped untreated sewage
off the coasts, burned garbage in open pits, and let huge piles
of discarded machinery slowly rust on the frozen turf.
</p>
<p> News of the environmental assaults has unleashed a global
wave of concern about Antarctica's future. "It is now clear
that the continent's isolation no longer protects it from the
impact of man," declares Bruce Manheim, a biologist with the
Environmental Defense Fund. How best to protect Antarctica has
been a topic of fierce debate in meetings from Washington to
Wellington, New Zealand. Everyone agrees that the issue is of
great importance and urgency. Despite the damage done so far,
Antarctica is still largely pristine, the only wild continent
left on earth. There scientists can study unique ecosystems and
climatic disturbances that influence the weather patterns of
the entire globe. The research being done on the frozen
continent cannot be carried out anywhere else. "In Antarctica
we still have the chance to protect nature in something close
to its natural state and leave it as a legacy for future
generations," says Jim Barnes, a founder of the Antarctic and
Southern Ocean Coalition, an alliance of more than 200
environmental groups.
</p>
<p> The focus of contention at the moment is the Wellington
Convention, an international agreement that would establish
rules governing oil and mineral exploration and development in
Antarctica. Proponents say the convention, painstakingly
drafted during six years of negotiations, contains stringent
environmental safeguards. But many environmentalists see the
convention as the first step toward the dangerous exploitation
of Antarctica's hidden store of minerals. They argue that the
continent should be turned into a "world park" in which only
scientific research and limited tourism would be permitted.
</p>
<p> That position did not garner much support until last spring,
when France and Australia, two countries with a major presence
in Antarctica, suddenly announced that they backed the
world-park idea and would not sign the Wellington Convention.
In Washington, Senator Albert Gore of Tennessee is leading a
drive to get the U.S. to withdraw its support of the accord.
Until the debate is resolved, there will be no agreed-upon
strategy for protecting Antarctica from mineral exploration.
</p>
<p> Meanwhile, some of the harm already done will not easily be
repaired and may have far-reaching impact. For many years, the
industrial nations have been releasing chlorofluorocarbons into
the atmosphere, not realizing that these chemicals were
destroying the ozone layer, which shields the earth from
harmful ultraviolet radiation. Because of the vagaries of air
currents, ozone depletion has been most severe over Antarctica.
It was the discovery in 1983 of an "ozone hole" over the
continent that first alerted scientists to the immediacy of the
CFC threat.
</p>
<p> Since then, researchers have been monitoring the hole and
looking for similar ozone destruction over populated areas.
Scientists predict that thinning ozone, and the resulting
increase in ultraviolet radiation, will cause damage to plants
and animals, as well as skin cancers and cataracts in humans.
To keep a bad situation from getting worse, nations are working
on an international agreement designed to phase out production
of CFCs by the year 2000.
</p>
<p> In the meantime, researchers have been carefully studying
the effects of ozone depletion on Antarctic life. Marine
ecologist Sayed El-Sayed of Texas A&M University discovered two
years ago at Palmer Station, a U.S. base on the Antarctic
Peninsula, that high levels of ultraviolet damage the
chlorophyll pigment vital for photosynthesis in phytoplankton,
slowing the marine plants' growth rate by as much as 30%.
That, in turn, could threaten krill, shrimplike creatures that
feed on phytoplankton and are a key link in Antarctica's food
chain. Says El-Sayed: "Fish, whales, penguins and winged birds
all depend very heavily on krill. If anything happened to the
krill population, the whole system would collapse."
</p>
<p> The fragility of life in the Antarctic climate was
dramatically underscored last January, when the Bahia Paraiso,
an Argentine supply and tourist ship, ran aground off Palmer
Station, spilling more than 643,450 liters (170,000 gal.) of
jet and diesel fuel. The accident killed countless krill and
hundreds of newly hatched skua and penguin chicks. Some 25
years of continuous animal population studies run by scientists
at Palmer may have been ruined. Just weeks after the Bahia
incident, the Peruvian research and supply ship Humboldt was
blown by gale-force winds onto rocks near King George Island,
producing an oil slick more than half a mile long.
</p>
<p> Such disasters are shocking and unsettling to the hundreds
of scientists in Antarctica, who had hoped the continent would
remain their unspoiled natural laboratory. But they too bear
much of the responsibility for the pollution that has soiled
the area. Just three months ago, McMurdo Station, a U.S. base
operated by the National Science Foundation, reported that
196,820 liters (52,000 gal.) of fuel had leaked from a rubber
storage "bladder" onto the ice shelf. Over the past year or
two, many bases have launched extensive cleanup campaigns, but
scientists have yet to find the right balance between studying
the Antarctic and preserving it.
</p>
<p> No one disputes the importance of the research. The
continent has a major--though not completely understood--influence on the world's weather. As Antarctica's white ice
sheet reflects the sun's heat back into space, an overlying
mass of air is kept frigid. This air rushes out to the sea,
where the earth's rotation turns it into the roaring forties
and the furious fifties--old sailors' terms for the fierce
winds that dominate the oceans between 40 degrees and 60
degrees south latitudes. If scientists can figure out just how
these winds affect the global flow of air, then it will be
easier to understand and predict the planet's weather.
</p>
<p> Antarctica also provides the best-preserved fossil record
of a fascinating chapter in the earth's history. Some 200
million years ago, during the Jurassic period, Antarctica
formed the core of the ancient supercontinent now known as
Gondwanaland. The name comes from Gondwana, a region in India
where geological evidence of the supercontinent's existence was
found. At the time of the supercontinent, Antarctica was nestled
in the temperate latitudes and was almost tropical. It was
covered by forests and filled with reptiles, primitive mammals
and birds. But by 160 million years ago, the supercontinent had
begun to break up. While most of the pieces, including South
America, Africa, India and Australia, stayed in warm regions,
Antarctica drifted to the South Pole.
</p>
<p> Thus was created the world's largest stretch of inhospitable
land. Precipitation is so sparse over Antarctica's 14 million
sq. km (5.4 million sq. mi.) that it is classified as one of
the world's dryest deserts. Because most of the small amount
of snow never melts and has accumulated for centuries, 98% of
Antarctica is permanently covered by a sheet of ice that has
an average thickness of 2,155 meters (7,090 ft.). That accounts
for 90% of the world's ice and 68% of its fresh water. Although
the sun shines continuously in the summer months, the rays hit
the land at too sharp an angle to melt the ice. At the South
Pole, the average temperature is -49 degrees C (-56.2 degrees
F) and the record high is -13.6 degrees C (7.5 degrees F).
During the perpetual darkness of winter, the temperature falls
to almost inconceivable levels. The lowest ever recorded was
in 1983 at the Soviet Union's Vostok Base: -89.2 degrees C
(-128.6 degrees F).
</p>
<p> Around the edges, though, Antarctica is more than just an
icebox. On the Antarctic Peninsula, which reaches like a finger
to within 965 km (600 miles) of South America, the temperature
has risen as high as 15 degrees C (59 degrees F). The peninsula
is home to the continent's only two species of flowering land
plants, a grass and a pearlwort. Off the coast is one of the
world's most productive marine ecosystems. Antarctica supports
35 species of penguins and other birds, six varieties of seals,
twelve kinds of whale and nearly 200 types of fish.
</p>
<p> It was the bountiful sea life that initially drew large
numbers of men to the southern continent. When James Cook first
circled Antarctica between 1772 and 1775, he saw hordes of
seals on the surrounding islands, and during the next century
the continent became a hunter's paradise. By the early 1900s,
elephant and fur seals were nearly extinct. And after 1904,
more than 1 million blue, minke and fin whales were harpooned
in Antarctic waters.
</p>
<p> Along with the exploiters came explorers, searching for
nothing more than scientific knowledge and personal and
national glory. In 1841 Britain's James Clark Ross became the
first man to find his way through the sea ice and reach the
mainland. The ultimate goal for the adventurers--the South
Pole--was not reached until seven decades later, during the
dramatic and ultimately tragic race between British explorer
Scott and Norway's Roald Amundsen. Relying on dogsleds, which
proved to be more dependable than the breakdown-prone
mechanical sleds used by Scott, Amundsen's party arrived
triumphantly at the pole on Dec. 14, 1911. When Scott got there
a month later, he was devastated to find a Norwegian flag
flying and notes from Amundsen. Things got even worse on the
way back. Only 18 km (11 miles) from a supply depot, Scott and
two companions were stopped by a blizzard, their fuel and food
nearly gone. Scott's diary entries end this way: "We shall stick
it out to the end, but we are getting weaker, of course, and
the end cannot be far. It seems a pity, but I do not think I
can write more...For God's sake look out for our people."
</p>
<p> Airplanes made Antarctic travel much less perilous. In 1929
Richard Byrd, an American, became the first person to fly to
the South Pole, a 16-hour round trip from Antarctica's west
coast. And in the 1930s, German aviators claimed part of the
continent for the Third Reich by dropping hundreds of stakes
emblazoned with swastikas.
</p>
<p> The postwar German government did not press the Nazis'
claim, but seven other nations with histories of Antarctic
exploration--Argentina, Chile, France, New Zealand, Britain,
Norway and Australia--maintained that parts of the continent
belonged to them. Some of the claims overlapped: Chile, Britain
and Argentina, for example, all declared their ownership of the
Antarctic Peninsula. The U.S., while making no claims, refused
to recognize those of other nations and organized numerous
expeditions, including the largest in Antarctic history.
Mounted in 1946 and called Operation Highjump, it was a naval
exercise involving 13 ships, 50 helicopters and nearly 5,000
service members. Its unstated purpose: to make sure the U.S.
could legitimately stake its own claim should it ever want to
do so.
</p>
<p> There could easily have been major territorial conflict, but
scientific cooperation intervened. It took the form of the
International Geophysical Year, actually 18 months long, which
was scheduled to take advantage of the peak of sunspot activity
predicted for 1957 and 1958. Sixty-seven countries joined in
this exhaustive study of the interactions between the sun and
earth. Much of the research went on in Antarctica, where
Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Chile, France, Britain, Japan,
New Zealand, Norway, South Africa, the U.S. and the Soviet
Union established bases.
</p>
<p> The Antarctic component of the IGY worked so well that after
the project ended, President Dwight Eisenhower invited the
eleven other nations that had built bases to join the U.S. in
an agreement that would govern all activities on and around the
frozen continent. The resulting Antarctic Treaty, ratified in
1961, forbids military activity, bans nuclear explosions and
radioactive-waste disposal, and mandates international
cooperation and freedom of scientific inquiry. Moreover, those
participating countries that claimed chunks of Antarctica as
their own agreed not to press those claims while the treaty
remained in force. Over the years, 13 other countries have
become voting members of the treaty system, and the original
document has been supplemented by agreements governing topics
as diverse as waste management and the protection of native
mammals and birds.
</p>
<p> The treaty did not eliminate the jockeying for position. The
U.S. and the Soviet Union have deliberately placed bases in
areas claimed by others, and countries have tried to solidify
their stakes by setting up post offices and sending children
to school in Antarctica. Argentina flew a pregnant woman to its
Marambio base so that she could give birth to the first native
of Antarctica. But no nation has overtly asserted sovereignty
since the 1950s. Even during the Falklands war, Britain and
Argentina, together with other nations, sat down to discuss
Antarctic Treaty issues.
</p>
<p> Amid an atmosphere of international partnership, research
has flourished. In the past few weeks alone, Antarctica's
scientists have carried out dozens of unique experiments. In
the McMurdo Sound area a group of geologists camped out in the
bitter cold of the Royal Society mountains, looking for
evidence of the ebbing and flowing of glaciers in Antarctica's
past, and biologists drew 50-kg (110-lb.) fish from ice holes
to study the unique organic antifreeze that keeps these sea
dwellers alive. Volcanologists braved the knifelike winds and
choking fumes atop Mount Erebus to learn what kinds of gases
and particles Antarctica's largest volcano emits. At Williams
Field, a runway on the Ross Ice Shelf, a multidisciplinary team
prepared to launch a huge helium balloon. Its purpose: to
follow circumpolar winds around the entire continent, gathering
data on cosmic rays and solar flares and testing the behavior
of high-density computer chips in the intense radiation of the
upper atmosphere. And deep in the interior, glaciologists at
the Soviets' Vostok Base dug out ice samples that carry clues
to the planet's atmosphere in layers laid down in the polar ice
cap tens of thousands of years ago.
</p>
<p> At the South Pole, meanwhile, astrophysicists were taking
advantage of a heat wave--the temperature had soared to -23
degrees C (-10 degrees F)--to set up detectors that would
peer at the faint microwave radiation left over from the Big
Bang explosion, which theoretically started the universe. In
the high altitudes atop the pole's ice cap, the detectors are
well above the densest, murkiest layers of atmosphere and can
peer through some of the dryest, clearest air on earth to help
determine whether the original Big Bang was unique or was
followed by smaller ones. A few hundred yards away, close to
the enormous geodesic dome that covers the thickly insulated
buildings of the U.S.'s Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station,
atmospheric scientists measured traces of pollutants released
around the globe. The pole is so remote from civilization that
there, better than anywhere else, scientists can accurately
assess just how far-reaching are the effects of pollution.
</p>
<p> The researchers who seek such knowledge are adventurous
souls who know better than most the meaning of the term
hardship post. Counting construction workers, maintenance crews
and other support staff, Antarctica's population is only 4,000
or so, even in midsummer. The scientists and other residents
tend to be in their 20s and 30s--vigorous enough to endure
the world's coldest workplace. A carpenter's helper recalls
toiling one time at -40 degrees C (-40 degrees F) in an
unheated building. She had on so many layers of clothing that
it took most of her energy just to move, she says. As for the
scientists, common sense sometimes gives way to a sense of
mission. Researchers handling delicate experiments have been
known to work without gloves in subfreezing temperatures until
their hands were numb.
</p>
<p> Just as daunting as the cold are the loneliness and
isolation in a land where phone lines are rare, mail is
erratic, and penguins vastly outnumber people. Thousands of
miles from friends and families, the residents of Antarctica
are often confined to small areas around their bases. At many
stations, living quarters are built underground so that they
are protected from the wind. When storms force workers to stay
indoors for days at a time, it amounts to their being trapped
in a bunker.
</p>
<p> But the bases try to make Antarctic life as enjoyable as
possible. At McMurdo Station, the continent's largest town, the
1,100 or more summer residents can hang out at the four Navy
bars, use a two-lane bowling alley, take aerobics classes at
the gym, and borrow videotapes from a library. Recent social
events included a chili-cooking contest and an amateur comedy
night. Even at the South Pole Station, home to no more than 90
hardy workers, there is an exercise room, a sauna, a poolroom
and a library equipped with wide-screen TV and a VCR.
</p>
<p> Along about February the annual exodus begins in earnest.
Once the cold season takes hold, planes stop making regular
flights to inland stations, and the ice layer spreads out to
sea, making access by ship nearly impossible. Only a few
hundred residents stay through the winter.
</p>
<p> The number of people who have gone to Antarctica is smaller
than the attendance at this year's Rose Bowl game, but those
few have had a disproportionately large impact. Because plants
and animals, along with human outposts, are largely confined
to the 2% of Antarctica that is ice-free for part of the year,
the world's most sparsely populated continent is,
paradoxically, overcrowded. The Antarctic Peninsula is
particularly in demand, with 13 stations; King George Island,
one of the South Shetland Islands, is home to an additional
eight. Planes, helicopters, snowmobiles, trucks and bulldozers
are in constant operation throughout the summer. Nearly every
base has its own helipad, landing strip, harbor and waste dump.
</p>
<p> The inhabitants of these bases have been notoriously
careless, often discarding trash in ways that would be illegal
at home. But their actions went largely unnoticed until January
1987, when Greenpeace became the first nongovernment
organization to establish a permanent Antarctic base, located
at Cape Evans, some 24 km (15 miles) north of McMurdo Station.
The group has mounted annual inspection tours of dozens of
bases. It was Greenpeace that publicized McMurdo's continued
dumping of untreated sewage into the sea and burning of trash
in an open-air pit. The waters right off the station are
reportedly more polluted with substances such as heavy metals
and PCBs than any similar stretch of water in the U.S.
Greenpeace has also documented reckless dumping and burning at
Soviet, Uruguayan, Argentine, Chilean and Chinese bases. And
an airstrip under construction at France's Dumont d'Urville
base has already leveled part of an Adelie-penguin rookery.
</p>
<p> The charges have some validity, says Erick Chiang, senior
U.S. representative in Antarctica, but they are exaggerated.
"Our behavior in the past was disgraceful--by today's
standards," he admits. "But we are doing much better. We're
installing a primary waste-treatment facility at McMurdo this
season. We've begun recycling. Yes, we lost 50,000 gal. of fuel
recently, but we've recovered more than half of it." Last month
McMurdo residents went patrolling for loose trash.
</p>
<p> Chiang contends that despite past sins, the local ecology
has not suffered very much. Some scientists agree. Says
Cornelius Sullivan of the University of Southern California,
who studies the algae that live in and under McMurdo Sound ice:
"A few places are filthy. But most of the water is still
absolutely pristine." Nonetheless, the National Science
Foundation could do much better. One thing that will help:
about $10 million was added to the agency's budget for 1990,
bringing it to $152 million, and much of the new money will go
toward protecting the environment.
</p>
<p> While scientists try to clean up their act, tourists are
posing an increasing threat to Antarctica's delicate
ecosystems. Chilean planes began flying visitors to the
peninsula in 1956, and luxury cruises started a decade later.
Although commercial flights stopped after an Air New Zealand
DC-10 crashed into Mount Erebus in 1979, killing all 257
aboard, ship travel has thrived. About 3,500 people, mostly
Americans, paid $5,000 to $16,000 to sail over from South
America last year. They generally stayed in Antarctica four or
five days. Most boats carry naturalists or other experts, who
give lectures, and groups often visit scientific stations. So
many boats cruise along the peninsula between November and
March that it has been dubbed the "Antarctic Riviera." Chile
has opened a hotel near its base. Antarctic activities include
hiking, mountain climbing, dogsledding, camping and skiing. A
few show-offs have even water-skied on the cold waters.
</p>
<p> The most intrusive visitors are those who tramp through
penguin rookeries and other wildlife habitats. Going anywhere
near certain kinds of seabirds can frighten them enough to
disrupt feeding patterns and reproductive behavior. Though
warned not to litter, some tourists leave behind film wrappers,
water bottles and cigarette butts. And, yes, Antarctica has
graffiti--on the rocks of Elephant Island.
</p>
<p> Responsible tour operators have come up with a code of
conduct that forbids visitors to harass animals, enter research
stations unless invited, and take souvenirs. Preservationists,
like the Environmental Defense Fund's Manheim, argue in
addition for strict limits on the size and frequency of tours
and for civil and criminal penalties for operators who do not
comply with the rules.
</p>
<p> The Antarctic Treaty nations may discuss tourism when they
meet later this year, but they are more likely to be
preoccupied with the growing debate over the future of oil and
mineral development. Concern first arose after the 1973 oil
crisis, when it became clear that there might someday be
pressure to drill for petroleum, even in the harsh Antarctic
environment. Eventually, the treaty nations decided it was best
to have rules in effect before that happened. The result was
the Wellington Convention, agreed to by representatives of 20
treaty nations in New Zealand's capital in June 1988. The
document essentially forbids any mineral exploration or
development without agreement by all treaty participants. But
most environmentalists are disturbed by any accord that
recognizes even the possibility of oil drilling. Naturalist
Jacques-Yves Cousteau has called the Wellington Convention
"nothing more than a holdup on a planetary scale."
</p>
<p> There is no certainty that commercially valuable deposits
of minerals exist. Surface rocks contain traces of iron,
titanium, low-grade gold, tin, molybdenum, coal, copper and
zinc. Gaseous hydrocarbons, sometimes associated with oil, have
been found in bottom samples taken from the Ross Sea. But in
most cases, says geologist Robert Rutford, president of the
University of Texas at Dallas, who did research in Antarctica
for more than 20 years, "minerals are less than 1% of the total
rock sample analyzed." Moreover, the vicious Antarctic climate
would make exploration dangerous and expensive.
</p>
<p> Still, say the Wellington Convention's opponents, some
countries might be tempted anyway. Contends Barnes of the
Antarctic and Southern Ocean Coalition: "Some nations are awash
in cash and technology and have no domestic oil supply. I think
Japan would be down there as soon as the continent was opened
up." Opponents of drilling point out that the Antarctic Treaty
has not always been scrupulously adhered to, especially when
it comes to fishing limits and environmental protection. They
argue that the Wellington Convention could also be skirted.
</p>
<p> Such arguments are behind the surge in support for a world
park. The proposal by Australia and France last October that
the continent be declared a "wilderness reserve" under the eye
of an Antarctic environmental-protection agency--essentially
the world-park scheme by a different name--was hailed by
environmentalists as a big victory. The U.S., still officially
committed to the Wellington agreement, did not go along with
the new initiative. But some Administration officials are said
to be opposed to the minerals convention, and Senator Gore
claims he has the votes to prevent its ratification in the
Senate. Observes Gore: "The whole theory of protecting
Antarctica with mining that is carefully circumscribed by
safety procedures is the approach that failed in Alaska's
Prince William Sound. We shouldn't make the same mistake
again."
</p>
<p> Nonratification by either France or Australia would
automatically kill the Wellington Convention. But that does not
guarantee that the world-park concept, as good as it would be
for Antarctica's environment, would replace the defeated
agreement. Some Antarctic Treaty nations oppose a permanent ban
on mineral development--notably Britain, which has the same
veto power as France and Australia. That raises the possibility
that the world will be left with no agreement at all on the
minerals question, not even the informal moratorium on
exploration and mining adopted in 1977 until a convention could
be ratified. Antarctica might thus be opened to wholly
unregulated mining.
</p>
<p> That is a frightening prospect, so alarming that the nations
subscribing to the Antarctic Treaty cannot afford to let it
happen. The Wellington Convention may not be perfect, but it
should be ratified. Far from a license to exploit, it would
serve as a major roadblock to development and could be
strengthened by further conventions specifying more stringent
protection--even by the creation of the same environmental
watchdog agency suggested by world-park proponents. The real
problem with the Antarctic Treaty system is that the rules are
not always strictly enforced, and there is no reason to think
that nations would pay any more attention to the provisions of
a world-park system than they do to existing regulations.
</p>
<p> In the end, the only way to save Antarctica is to convince
the countries operating there--and those that join them in
the future--that it is not worth fouling the only relatively
untouched continent left on earth to gain a few extra barrels
of oil. The environmental activists have done much to make that
point, and governments seem to be listening. This may be the
place where mankind finally learns to live in harmony with
nature. If so, the forbidding vistas of Antarctica may be just
as full of life a century from now as they were when humans
first set foot on that continent less than 200 years ago.
</p>
<p>-- With reporting by Andrea Dorfman/New York
</p>
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