Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
It is also said that Herbert was the first person to reach the pole of inaccessibility.
This is also known as the South Pole of inaccessibility.
It is the closest town to the Australian continental pole of inaccessibility.
He also hoped to reach the northern "pole of inaccessibility", the most remote point in the Arctic regions.
There's another place called the Pole of Inaccessibility.
It is close to the African Pole of Inaccessibility.
See also Pole of inaccessibility.
Other continents' poles of inaccessibility are as follows:
The African Pole of Inaccessibility is located here.
The southern pole of inaccessibility is far more remote and difficult to reach than the geographic South Pole.
Wanblee is a few miles directly northeast of the North American continental pole of inaccessibility.
The island is one of three considered closest to the Oceanic Pole of Inaccessibility.
See Pole of inaccessibility for approximations of other locations in Australia that could also make such claims.
The Eurasian pole of inaccessibility.
A Pole of Inaccessibility reached.
(See Continental Pole of Inaccessibility for other candidates).
Pole of inaccessibility (Antarctic research station)
Northern Pole of Inaccessibility - the point in the Arctic Ocean farthest from land.
McNeill has attempted to reach the Northern Pole of Inaccessibility on two occasions.
At Pole of Inaccessibility Station a snow-accumulation stake net was installed and the vehicles were secured.
The southern pole of inaccessibility is the point on the Antarctic continent most distant from the Southern Ocean.
A pole of inaccessibility marks a location that is the most challenging to reach owing to its remoteness from geographical features that could provide access.
Each continent has its own Continental Pole of Inaccessibility, defined as the place on the continent that is farthest from any ocean.
In the Eighties he located the "pole of inaccessibility" of Eurasia (the most difficult place to access of the continental landmass).
December 14 - The 3rd Soviet Antarctic Expedition becomes the first ever to reach the Southern Pole of Inaccessibility.