SCAR Gazetteer Information: Each place can have one or more entries in the SCAR Composite Gazetteer, dependant on its origin. By viewing an individual entry, you may see multiple references to the same place. SCAR uses a more general feature type coding, so each place will, in general, have multiple feature types.

Showing all 2 place names.

Name Latitude Longitude Feature Type
Kyle Hills (NZL) 77° 30' 00.0" S 169° 02' 00.0" E Hill
Name ID: 134164 Place ID: 17089

Feature n.64 in ACAN minutes of 19/06/2000. A prominent group of volcanic cones, hills, ridges, and peaks that occupy the E part of Ross Island between Mount Terror and Cape Crozier. The hills extend E-W for 8 mi, rising from sea level at Cape Crozier to c.2600 m in Mount McIntosh at the W end of the group. Local relief of features is on the order of 200 m. Named by US-ACAN (2000) after Philip R Kyle, Professor of Geochemistry, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, Socorro, NM, who worked extensively in Antarctica over 28 field seasons, 1969-2000; completed six seasons under NZARP auspices, 1969-76; principal investigator on numerous NSF research projects in 23 seasons of field work under USAP auspices, 1977-2000, with focus on long-term research of the volcano Mount Erebus; in charge of the Mount Erebus Volcano Observatory, 2000.

Kyle Hills (USA) 77° 30' 00.0" S 169° 02' 00.0" E Hill
Name ID: 127672 Place ID: 17089

A prominent group of volcanic cones, hills, ridges, and peaks that occupy the E part of Ross Island between Mount Terror and Cape Crozier. The hills extend E-W for 8 mi, rising from sea level at Cape Crozier to c.2600 m in Mount McIntosh at the W end of the group. Local relief of features is on the order of 200 m. Named by US-ACAN (2000) after Philip R. Kyle, Professor of Geochemistry, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, Socorro, NM, who worked extensively in Antarctica over 28 field seasons, 1969-2000; completed six seasons under NZARP auspices, 1969-76; principal investigator on numerous NSF research projects in 23 seasons of field work under USAP auspices, 1977-2000, with focus on long-term research of the volcano Mount Erebus; in charge of the Mount Erebus Volcano Observatory, 2000.

Showing all 2 place names.

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