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"Villas Las Estrella is one of the few settlements in Antarctica.
there is a school, a post office, some houses and other infrastructure.
to be in a place where the perennial temperature is below zero, the appendix needs to be removed first.
" is one of the few settlements in Antarctica, according to the BBC website.
there is a school, a post office, some houses and other infrastructure.
to be in a place where the perennial temperature is below zero, the appendix needs to be removed first.
for long-term residents (and even children), having the appendix removed is the only option and a necessary precaution.
some people have lived here for years, not just weeks or months.
the nearest major hospital is more than 1,000 kilometres away, on the other side of the icy southern ocean, and needs to pass through the tip of King George Island.
Star Town has only a few doctors and no professional surgeons.
is equipped with basic medical facilities and any serious complications require the evacuation of patients.
the settlement is home to about 100 people, mostly scientists and staff from the Chilean Air Force or Navy, who are on rotation, and the long-serving military often live here with their families. What is life like
residents? The BBC reporter came here to experience a moment.
reporters sit on a modified stretcher inside the Lockheed C-130 Hercules, a large military transport aircraft.
on its way from the southernmost tip of Chile to Startown, looking out from the small scratched windows of the plane, only to see the endless ocean, dark and cold.
passengers must use earplugs during the two-hour journey due to the loud sound of the C-130's propellers. A gravel runway near the
is the main route in and out.
arrived at Star Town, you can see a welcome sign and a pillar marked with some arrows pointing to some distant cities, indicating the distance between here and some cities, for example, "17501 km from Beijing."
was January, and when reporters arrived, the Antarctic summer hail hit them in the face directly from the plane door.
nearby, some buildings cling to rocks and pipes.
it's hard to get rid of a smell in some places: the mixture of exhaust gases and public toilets cleaned with chemicals.
it's the taste of industrial life.
Star Town is probably the closest thing on Earth to an alien life experience.
is covered with jagged black rocks and white ice cubes, with little greenness.
waves of white seagrass, penguin carcasses and ice washed through the rocky sand.
but the room is comfortable and the atmosphere is friendly.
walls are memorials and photographs of expeditions and tourists who have come here, and there's even Stephen H. Hawking's plaque swasy when he came here.
the average annual temperature here is minus 2.3 degrees Celsius, which is actually warmer than the Antarctic continent.
Sergio? Sergio Cubillos, a Chilean-based commander at the air base, is based here.
Kubiros and his wife and children have lived here for more than two years.
although his family occasionally flew back to Chile, he was always there.
Kubiros is a lieutenant colonel who leads a Chilean air force.
obviously, sometimes the weather is very bad.
"This winter, we can't go out for a few weeks," Kubiros said.
", however, Says Kubiros, his family adapts and loves the adventurous life here.
one of his son's favorite movies is Happy Feet, which tells the story of an Antarctic penguin.
To Enjoy Life in StarTown? He smiled and said, "Yes, but that's because I'm the commander!" "There are people who work here with their spouses.
but pregnancy is discouraged here, at least in the military, because the risks are too great.
this is a photo taken by Kubiros' son after the snow.
children here can go to a primary school, but there are often snow jams.
here, people never hunt penguins.
they walk on the road without fear.
the main means of transport here are tracked cars, four-wheel-drive vehicles or boats.
in the distance, a Russian church overlooks an air base in Chile, where the Trinity Church is run by Russian Orthodox priests.
when the reporter returned to Punta Arenas, Chile's southernmost city, the most prominent color in front of him was green.
flowers, meadows and trees are familiar to most people in the world, but for the inhabitants of Startown, the vibrant hues of the continent are obscured by black, grey and white.
, despite the difficult conditions and the need to remove the appendix, these long-term inhabitants of Antarctica have experienced a unique life at the end of the world that most humans cannot experience.
.