Antarctica as a whole has seen a slight increase in ice over the last 40 years, with record extent being achieved as recently as 2014:
“At the end of the last Ice Age, the air became warmer and carried more moisture across the continent, doubling the amount of snow dropped on the ice sheet,” Zwally said
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/nasa-study-mass-gains-o...
We should start to go deeper.
"Schaefer said the temperature of the peninsula, the South Shetland Islands and the James Ross archipelago, which Seymour is part of, has been erratic over the past 20 years. After cooling in the first decade of this century, it has warmed rapidly.:
Even if that weren't the case, this is simply an article about air temperature. It broke the known record by a full degree celsius in the backdrop of massive, global record heat record setting as part of a long term trend.
Leaving that aside, what point are you trying to do with your comment? Do you think the southern polar ice sheet is melting from volcanoes, or getting larger?
However, you can make a headline out of tiny regional fluctuations and puff it up to be more than it is. I'm not impressed that a record from Antarctica was broken (1 degree warmer than 1982? Yawn). How long have we had stations in this particular location? 40 years? 50 years?
Meanwhile you've got sensationalist headlines like in the Daily Sun: "Antarctica is hotter than SPAIN this week as mercury hits 69F for first time"
Which is blatantly false. It's a single data point on a massive continent that is obviously not 69F across the whole island, nor is it a sustained 69F. I have a big problem with people blowing out of proportion every individual data point in the massively complex climate system of the planet earth. How many points on the earth experienced record cold on the same day? Quite a few!
https://www.politico.com/story/2017/03/energy-department-cli...