Lemmy Lemmy:
N_Fiddledog N_Fiddledog:
Please tell me you're joking.
https://nsidc.org/cryosphere/quickfacts/seaice.htmlYeah, I enjoy that every time some guy who's just starting to discover the facts sends me there, but it has nothing to do with what I'm now going to laugh at you for, because apparently you were serious when you said:
$1:
Too bad it's the north pole that faces the sun.
Think of the phrase "spins on its axis". The earth does that. It also wobbles. The North pole will get more sun during its summer and the South Pole will get more sun during it's summer.
But they both get sun. A nice day during the Antarctic summer might be 5 below, but the ice around Antarctica does have a melt season. It gets sun. The South Pole also gets sun.
Here's a pic of the Amundsen-Scott research station at the geographic South pole.

You'll notice it was taken in sunlight.
In fact, regarding that station:
$1:
Since the Amundsen–Scott Station is located at the South Pole, it is at the only place on the land surface of the Earth where the sun is continuously up for six months and then continuously down for six months.
More pics and info below.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amundsen- ... .932003.29Now if you had said the earth tilts more towards the sun at the north pole on its axis you'd have a point. But it does not face the sun in a way that the South Pole can never get sunlight. Antarctic ice has a melt season. Originally AGW theory suggested more ice would melt at both poles. That did not happen in the South, so they just adjusted the hypothesis and claimed the models knew that all along. They didn't.