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Antarctica
the <strong>Antarctic Treaty and its follow-on agreements </strong>govern the use of Antarctica, ensuring it is used only for peaceful purposes and scientific research; signed in 1959 and in force since 1961, the original Treaty bans military activity, weapons testing, and nuclear waste disposal, while allowing military personnel to assist with research or other peaceful efforts; it promotes international cooperation in science, guarantees the free exchange of research, and freezes territorial claims; the Treaty covers all land and ice south of 60° south latitude, and allows Treaty nations to inspect any station or facility<br><br>decisions are made by consensus at annual meetings, and member countries implement these decisions through their national laws (see “Legal system”); additional agreements have strengthened the Treaty system, including conventions to protect seals (1972) and other marine life (1980), as well as an environmental protocol (1991, took effect in 1998); the protocol bans mining and includes strict rules on environmental impact, waste, pollution, wildlife, and protected areas; as of December 2024, there are <strong>58 member nations</strong>: <strong>29 consultative members</strong>, including the 7 claimant countries (Argentina, Australia, Chile, France, New Zealand, Norway, and the UK), and <strong>29 non-consultative members</strong>; a permanent Antarctic Treaty Secretariat, established in 2004 in Buenos Aires, supports the system
Bouvet Island
French Southern and Antarctic Lands
Heard Island and McDonald Islands