In the opening scene, the wind turbines clearly face away from the Sno-Cat. After Seth starts the turbine he's working on, the turbines are facing the other way - towards the Sno-Cat. Then the blades of the rogue turbine are shown spinning clockwise as they fall, yet when the blades hit the ground they are spinning counter-clockwise.
House and his team are in the Northern Hemisphere, during winter. Therefore at that time it would be summer in the South Pole which is in the Southern Hemisphere, and not six months into winter-over season of Antarctica which usually runs from February to October.
Even at temperatures around minus 50 or 60 blood doesn't stop faster because of freezing. And neither does the "glue" the doctor uses in the opening scene to fix the wound.
When House goes to the ER to talk to Cameron about cable, Cameron orders the nurse to administer "Amoxicillin 500mg, I.V.," such a dosage form has never been available on the market; not at least in the US. (Ampicillin is the I.V. equivalent used)
When House is using his MacBook Pro, the Apple on the back isn't lit. If the monitor is on, this light should be lit.
30:53, the patient whilst sits on a bed and web chats; the viewers are shown a window which shows the silhouette of a leafy tree in Antarctica.
During the biopsy, Wilson instructs Milton to pull 'back on the syringe'. Pulling back on the syringe means the point of the needle is too deep. Wilson should have instructed Milton to pull back on the plunger, which is what Milton actually does.
House calls a patient by her name, a stunned Dr. Wilson says to House "you used her name" to which House replies "just trying to move things along, Bob" Dr. Wilson's first name is James and he is played by actor Robert (Bob) Sean Leonard.