This church in a cave with walls made of ice is the most southern place of worship of any religion in the world, located 800 miles from the
South Pole. It is a permanent Catholic church for the Argentina base and scientific research station founded in the 1950s on
Coats Land. The original Belgrano base was opened in the 1950s, however the ice it was built on was unstable, so the base had to be rebuilt. The Belgrano II base opened in 1979, on around a hectare of nearby land which was free from ice. It was at this second base that the chapel was built, when a system of underground tunnels were excavated in the ice. The base and chapel serve around 1000 people during the winter, and up to 4000 summer residents. Mass is celebrated regularly for those stationed at the research facility, and the chapel is accessible all year round. Despite the physical location of the church, it falls under the
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Bahía Blanca, in
Buenos Aires, with
Carlos Azpiroz Costa as the Archbishop, and
Pedro Ernesto Fournau as the Auxiliary Bishop. == See also ==