I wanted to add some cautionary advice here.

Mapping in the Antarctic in OSM is to a much larger part than on other 
continents fueled by 'imagined' things.  I am not talking about stuff here 
individually made up by mappers but more institutionally conjured ideas, 
projections and to some extent also political propaganda.  The percentage of 
things mapped in the Antarctic in recent years that is based on secondary 
sources (government/institutional publications, wikipedia etc.) without any 
verification based on primary sources (local observations, satellite/aerial 
imagery, ground photos) is rather high - in a way that in the long term would 
become a serious problem for OpenStreetMap.

Having looked at a lot of satellite imagery from the Antarctic over the years i 
can clearly say that a lot of claims that are being made about 'roads' in the 
Antarctic - in OSM or in Wikipedia - do not hold up in scrutiny against primary 
source evidence.  And in such cases you'd have to ask yourself:  Do you want 
OSM to represent the observable reality on the ground or do you want it to 
reflect the major consensus narrative of a certain cultural sphere.

As a basic definition a route of navigation on land has two requirements to 
qualify as a road/path in OSM:

* it is physically manifested in some form, at least during those periods when 
it is used (in case of seasonal roads on seasonally dry/frozen lakes/rivers for 
example).
* it is used in the physically manifested form with some level of regularity 
and permanency.

Two examples from outside the Antarctic that would probably not qualify:

https://mc.bbbike.org/mc/?lon=10.713939&lat=17.952688&zoom=13&num=3&mt0=bing-satellite&mt1=mapnik&mt2=nokia-satellite
https://mc.bbbike.org/mc/?lon=14.069293&lat=22.547244&zoom=17&num=3&mt0=bing-satellite&mt1=mapnik&mt2=nokia-satellite

The first simply lacks a physical manifestation (because the ground is too 
dynamically re-shaped by wind and the route used is too variable in its exact 
course).  The second visibly demonstrates that no single physically manifested 
track is commonly used by the different users of the route.  Both of these are 
evidently verifiable routes of navigation (a bit like ferry routes) - but, by 
established meaning of the road tags in OSM, not roads (though of course 
mappers are free to map them as such - as evidenced by the examples).

Looking concretely at long distance supply routes in the Antarctic - those are 
largely quite comparable to the linked to cases outside the Antarctic - except 
that most of them are much more sparsely used for very specific purposes 
(supply of a specific remote location with certain goods that are impossible or 
much less cost efficient to transport via airplane).  By established 
conventions of functional road tagging in OSM these would almost all be service 
roads (no through-traffic to other destinations than the ones the route ends 
at).  The level of physical manifestation varies a lot depending on local snow 
and wind conditions and type and frequency of use.  Some routes that have 
likely not been used for many years are clearly visible in images while others 
(some of which are claimed to be used with high frequency on Wikipedia and 
elsewhere) have clearly no physical manifestation.

In general, it is unlikely that mappers at large can be convinced to refrain 
from inflating tagging in the Antarctic to compensate for the variable scale of 
the Mercator projection or to reproduce certain subjective believes of 
importance.  This applies to both routes of navigation and populated places.  
The solution would be to create distinct tagging to account for the concrete 
features that exist and are practically verifiable specifically to be used in 
parallel with the subjectively inflated (and therefore semantically 
meaningless) mainstream tags.  In this specific case that would be tagging of 
routes of land navigation with sporadic use and permanently/regularly populated 
places that are not settlements in the sense that people individually settle 
there for a longer time, but that might still fulfill some of the functions 
settlements have elsewhere.  The criteria for such tagging should be chosen for 
practical verifiability based on available primary sources.

--
Christoph Hormann
https://www.imagico.de/

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