Biology, asked by Prince1644, 4 months ago

What is the most hardest place

Answers

Answered by kateeeykat
0

Answer:

The Independence Mountains, Antarctica

Explanation:

Reaching the Independence Mountains combines all the extremes of polar exploration on the planet’s least explored continent. Visiting the unexplored range of Antarctica certainly isn’t a voyage for the faint of heart (or lung capacity).

It requires three flights, (Patagonia to the permanently frozen runway at Patriot Hills and then on to Pirit Hills, located at 80 degrees south). Once on the ground, the journey consists of a combination of long range cross-country skiing, sledding in the endless expanse of of the arctic and camping amongst the solitude of the tundra.

All sounds a little extreme, but trust us the reward is more than worth the effort.

Answered by AVENGERS789456
1

Explanation:

Enamel

Enamel, in anatomy, the hardest tissue of the body, covering part or all of the crown of the tooth in mammals. Enamel, when mature, consists predominantly of apatite crystals containing calcium and phosphate. Enamel is not living and contains no nerves.

Similar questions