and others in the
Southern Ocean People The first recorded sighting of Antarctica is credited to the
Spaniard Gabriel de Castilla, who reported seeing distant southern snow-capped mountains in 1603. The first Antarctic land discovered was the island of
South Georgia, visited by the
English merchant
Anthony de la Roché in 1675. Although such myths and speculation about a
Terra Australis ("Southern Land") date back to antiquity, the first confirmed sighting of the continent of
Antarctica is commonly accepted to have occurred in 1820 by the
Russian expedition of
Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen and
Mikhail Lazarev on
Vostok and
Mirny. The Australian
James Kerguelen Robinson (1859–1914) was the first human born in the Antarctic, on board the
sealing ship
Offley in the
Gulf of Morbihan (Royal Sound then),
Kerguelen Island on 11 March 1859. The first human born and raised on an Antarctic island was
Solveig Gunbjørg Jacobsen born on 8 October 1913 in
Grytviken, South Georgia. in
Argentina is the most active gateway to Antarctica.
Emilio Marcos Palma (born 7 January 1978) is an Argentine man who was the first documented person born on the continent of Antarctica at the
Esperanza Base. His father, Captain Jorge Palma, was head of the Argentine Army detachment at the base. While ten people have been born in Antarctica since, Palma's birthplace remains the southernmost. In late 1977, Silvia Morella de Palma, who was then seven months pregnant, was airlifted to Esperanza Base, in order to complete her pregnancy in the base. The airlift was a part of the Argentine solutions to the sovereignty dispute over territory in Antarctica. Emilio was automatically granted Argentine citizenship by the government since his parents were both Argentine citizens, and he was born in the claimed
Argentine Antarctica. Palma can be considered to be the first native Antarctican. , the
geographic South Pole, with its signpost in the background The Antarctic region had no
indigenous population when first discovered, and its present inhabitants comprise a few thousand transient
scientific and other personnel working on tours of duty at the several dozen
research stations maintained by various countries. However, the region is visited by more than 40,000 tourists annually, the most popular destinations being the
Antarctic Peninsula area (especially the
South Shetland Islands) and
South Georgia Island. In December 2009, the growth of
tourism, with consequences for both the ecology and the safety of the travellers in its great and remote wilderness, was noted at a conference in New Zealand by experts from signatories to the
Antarctic Treaty. The definitive results of the conference were presented at the Antarctic Treaty states' meeting in Uruguay in May 2010.
Time zones Because Antarctica surrounds the
South Pole, it is theoretically located in all
time zones. For practical purposes, time zones are usually based on
territorial claims or the time zone of a station's owner country or supply base. ==List of offshore islands==